Exploring Intra-arterial Contrast Administration for Intraoperative Imaging Using a Swine Model

Author:

Treffalls Rebecca N.1,Poe Kelly2,Abdou Hossam1,Stonko David P.13,Edwards Joseph1,DeMartino Randall R.4,Ptak Thomas1,Morrison Jonathan J.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. R. Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA

2. School of Medicine, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA

3. Department of Surgery, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, USA

4. Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

Abstract

Intraoperative computed tomography (CT) imaging with endovascular delivery of intra-arterial (IA) contrast could potentially provide higher attenuation with lower contrast volumes than intravenous (IV) administration. We aimed to compare IA and IV contrast use for organ-specific CT abdominal imaging. Five anesthetized swine had external jugular and brachial artery access with ascending aortic pigtail placement. An IV protocol was 100 mL at 5 mL/sec over 20 sec vs 50 mL of IA contrast at 5 mL/sec over 10 sec. Region-of-interest markers were applied to anatomical regions to measure attenuation (HU) over time. IA and IV contrast protocols achieved adequate aortic opacification (IA, 455 ± 289 vs IV, 450 ± 114 HU). The IA contrast aortic attenuation curve reached peak attenuation compared with IV contrast (IA, 8 vs 23 sec; P < .001). Time to peak attenuation was similar between IA and IV contrast in the portal vein (IA, 38 vs IV, 42 sec, P = .25). IA administration achieved a superior contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) in less time compared with IV (R2 = .94; P < .001). IA contrast achieved adequate opacification with less bolus broadening and a superior CNR compared with IV contrast while using a smaller contrast volume for directed organ-directed imaging.

Funder

School of Medicine, University of Maryland

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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