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SOMATOM Sessions The Difference in Computed Tomography Issue no. 20 / June 2007 Stanford-Edition June 13th–16th, 2007 Cover Story Dual Source CT Reshapes Clinical Imaging Page 4 News syngo CT Oncology Page 14 Clinical Outcomes Acute Care: New Insight Into Kidney Stone Detection and Treatment With Spiral Dual Energy Page 44 Science Half-Scan vs. Multi-Segment Reconstruction for CT Coronary Angiography Page 54 Education & Events New: Cardiac CT Poster Page 60 Editor’s Letter André Hartung, Vice President Marketing and Sales. Dear Reader, To provide the world’s population with the best possible, economically solid, medical care is the challenge faced by all healthcare systems today. This places the responsibility squarely upon medical doctors, clinics and other healthcare institutions to cost-efficiently provide faster and more reliable diagnoses and treatments. Given the pressure to constantly reduce costs, it is no longer practical to expect the investment in high-end imaging equipment to be amortized from imaging patients alone: the entire clinical process, whether in hospitals or practices, must be accelerated while improving healthcare quality. In everyday practice, this means reducing the time required from ”suspicion” to diagnosis, reducing the number of examinations and shortening the length of hospital stays – all improvements that can be ideally supplemented by computed tomography (CT). CT offers an incredibly broad spectrum of examinations, is widely available, – usually around the clock – with minimum personnel requirements. New clinical applications and ease-of-use promise a bright future for CT in improved patient care while further reducing costs. The recent introduction of Dual Source CT with the SOMATOM® Definition represents a break-through in the entire medical imaging industry. Beta-blockers are no longer necessary for heart CT scans and no patient must ever again be turned away. A major benefit is the ability to avoid unnecessary and expensive diagnostic heart catheterization procedures. syngo® Dual Energy (DE) transforms black and white anatomical imaging into highly functional color imaging, making many pathologies visible that were previously not detectable – such as, for only one example, gout related urate deposits. The probability that syngo DE will soon become a standard CT application is obvious. The trend is clearly visible today towards automatically processing large data volume rather than manually viewing and post-processing layers and slices. This procedure is perhaps best illustrated by syngo CT Oncology**, an application that supports the complete diagnostic workflow. Rough approximations of tumor dimensions are now replaced by precise measurements. Because oncology accounts for approximately 60% of CT use*, improvements in this area will speed up and simplify routine throughput in many practices. The necessity for data to be available to many departments within a medical facility, as well as to external locations, has been solved by Siemens with the introduction of syngo WebSpace. 3D data can now be called up for viewing and processing wherever and whenever it is needed - even from a home PC or a laptop while traveling. Instead of purchasing and installing multiple workstations, medical facilities today can install an imaging center with an application server that is constantly updated and simultaneously available for up to 20 viewers at all times. The savings in both investment and expensive professional time are considerable. It has always been Siemens‘ ambition to establish sweeping, innovative megatrends and consistently follow these up with unique products. As you will read in this issue of the SOMATOM Sessions, we are not relaxing our dedication to this principle and to providing you with new, intelligent solutions that make a positive difference in all your professional activities. André Hartung * Results may vary. Data on file. ** Pending 510(k): The information about this product is being provided for planning purposes only. This product is pending 510(k) review, and is not yet commercially available in the U.S. Cover Page: Volume rendered image of a dual energy examination of the hands of an adult patient with acute gout. With the dual energy information, deposits of uric acid can be detected within the tophi. Areas of active inflammation additionally show an increased contrast enhancement. By Drs. T. Johnson, S. Weckbach, H. Kellner, M. Reiser and C. Becker, University of Munich – Grosshadern, Munich/Germany. Cf. ‘Molecular Imaging of Gout‘ (Arthritis & Rheumatism; in press) 2 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Content Cover Story 4 Dual Source CT Reshapes Clinical Imaging News 10 Maximum CT Capabilities in Minimum Space 14 Fully Automated Tumor Tracking With syngo CT Oncology 16 syngo Circulation – Siemens Scientifically Validated Cardiac CT Software Business 17 Flexibility for the Future – Now 22 Big Progress for a Small Clinic 25 Cardiac CT Takes Off 4 Dual Energy For Clinical Routine Clinical Outcomes Cardiovascular: 30 Heterotopic Heart Transplant With Arrhythmic Heart Rate of 45 –125 bpm 32 Reliable In-Stent Lumen Visualization With Dual Source CT Coronary Angiography 34 Abdominal CTA With Direct Dual Energy Bone Subtraction Oncology: 36 New: syngo CT Oncology 38 Improved Evaluation and Follow-up of Routine Diagnostic Oncology Exams With syngo CT Oncology Neurology: 40 Utilizing the SOMATOM Emotion 16 for a Neuro DSA CTA Evaluation of a Suspected PICA Aneurysm 25 Cardiac CT Takes Off Acute Care: 42 Dual Source CT Triple Rule Out Without ß-Blocker 44 New Insight Into Kidney Stone Detection and Characterization With Spiral Dual Energy Science 46 Detecting Coronary Atherosclerosis by DSCT Images With Color Maps 48 Coronary CT Angiography With DSCT – Implications for Contrast Media Delivery 52 Nefertiti´s Bust – An Inside View 54 Half-Scan vs. Multi-Segment Reconstruction for CT Coronary Angiography Education & Events 32 DSCT Coronary Angiography 59 CT Life Card: Clinical Education at Your CT Workplace / E-Logbook: Eliminate Cumbersome Paperwork 60 New: Cardiac CT Poster / New: CTA Interpretation Workshops 61 Free 90 Day Trial Licenses for Clinical Applications / Frequently Asked Questions 62 E-Newsletter / Upcoming Events & Courses 63 Imprint SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 3 Cover Story Dual Source CT Reshapes Clinical Imaging When dual source technology burst on the scene in 2005, it did more than change the look of CT. It changed the future of medicine, not only surmounting critical barriers in cardiac imaging, but also introducing an entirely new way of characterizing body tissues using dual energy techniques. By Catherine Carrington From the start, it was clear that cardiac imaging would win big with Dual Source CT. With a temporal resolution of just 83 milliseconds, Siemens’ SOMATOM® Definition Dual Source CT scanner can freeze cardiac motion in even the most challenging patients. Nowhere is this more important than in the emergency department (ED), where the Definition is revolutionizing the diagnosis of patients with acute chest pain. “Dual Source CT has overcome many of the obstacles we had with the 64-slice scanner,” says Michael Gallagher, MD, a cardiologist at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan. “We have fewer artifacts, less dependency on heart rate, less dependency on the regularity of the heart rhythm, and overall, a much higher percentage of diagnostic scans.” Gallagher has been deeply involved in research into the role of multislice CT for the evaluation of patients with acute chest pain. In a study in the February 2007 issue of the Annals of Emergency Medicine, he showed that 64-slice CT was at least as accurate as conventional stress nuclear testing for determining the cause of chest pain in low-risk patients, if not more so. A negative CT scan was 99 % accurate for eliminating coronary artery disease as the cause of chest pain, while a negative nuclear stress test was 97 % accurate*. 1 1 Large aneurysm of ascending aorta. *Results may vary. Data on file. 4 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Cover Story No Need for Beta-Blockers The SOMATOM Definition Dual Source CT is a further leap forward. “Image quality on the Dual Source CT is excellent. In fact, it’s as good without the use of betablockers as it was on the 64-slice CT when patients were premedicated with betablockers,” Gallagher says. The ability to eliminate beta-blockers in most patients has had an enormous impact on the evaluation of acute chest pain, expanding the range of patients who are eligible for CT scanning, streamlining patient preparation in both the ED and the CT suite, speeding the time to diagnosis, freeing up resources for additional patients, and cutting healthcare costs. In the past, as many as 20 % of patients simply could not have a cardiac CT scan, as they could not safely take beta-blockers to slow the heart rate to 65 to 70 beats per minute, a rate necessary to achieve high-quality images on a 64-slice CT scanner. This group includes, among others, patients with asthma or left ventricular dysfunction, and those who have used cocaine within the previous few days. With the Definition, such patients can be routinely scanned without the need for beta-blockers. At the University of Pennsylvania, for example, patients with a heart rate as high as 85 beats per minute undergo cardiac CT scanning without beta-blockers. In the past, 70 % of patients were given oral beta-blockers and 20 % needed additional intravenous beta-blockers; today very few patients take any medication to slow the heart rate. “The Dual Source CT has dramatically reduced the percentage of patients getting beta-blockers to about 10 %,” says Harold Litt, MD, Chief of Cardiovascular Imaging and an Assistant Professor of Radiology and Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. “And it’s likely that most of those patients are getting beta-blockers not because of the CT scan, but because their care in the emergency department dictates it. We’re not giving any intravenous beta-blockers on the CT table.” William Beaumont Hospital also now eschews beta-blockers until the heart rate exceeds 85 beats per minute. They have successfully stretched that limit, however. “It is important to note that we have scanned patients with heart rates of 90, 100 and 110 beats per minute on the Definition, with very positive results,” Gallagher says. The ability to eliminate beta-blockers from the scan protocol has more than clinical benefits. It streamlines patient diagnosis from beginning to end, saving both time and money. Shorter Stays, Reduced Costs Researchers at William Beaumont published a groundbreaking study in the February 27, 2007, issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. It showed that with a standard nuclear stress testing protocol, it took more than 15 hours, on average, to reach a diagnosis in low-risk patients with acute chest pain. The use of 64-slice CT cut that time to 3.4 hours. “The standard work-up can be long and complicated. Patients can spend an entire day in the emergency room,” says Gilbert L. Raff, MD, director of the Minestrelli Center for Advanced Cardiovascular Imaging at William Beaumont. “This is the first study in which emergency physicians used CT to make clinical decisions about the management of patients with chest pain. It represents a major change.” Today, the Definition is speeding patient care still more. Much of the improvement takes place even before the patient arrives in the CT suite. “There used to be a lot of phone calls back and forth between the 2 2 Triple rule-out examination with artifact-free visualization of right and left coronary arteries and aortic arch. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 5 Cover Story emergency physician and the radiologist,” says Litt. “‘Is the patient eligible for the study? Can he be given beta-blockers? Is the heart rate response adequate? Does the patient need intravenous beta-blockers? Will a nurse need to go to radiology to monitor the patient?’ The Definition has made things much less complicated because we don’t have to talk about those issues now.” In addition, waiting for the patient’s heart rate to slow to the target range typically took an hour or more. Today, if the electrocardiogram is normal and the first set of cardiac enzymes shows no signs of a heart attack, the patient can immediately go for CT scanning. If the second set of cardiac enzymes is normal, the patient can be safely discharged home, potentially within only a few hours of arriving at the ED. Although neither William Beaumont nor the University of Pennsylvania has tracked the improvement in time from patient arrival in the ED to the initiation of scanning, both Litt and Gallagher believe the savings have been substantial. In addition, Gallagher estimates that it now takes only about two hours from the time the ED physician orders the CT scan until the final results are available, a savings of one-and-a-half hours that is attributable to the Definition. Similarly, at the University of Pennsylvania, the time from CT order to final report during daytime hours averages about two-anda-half hours, but it is often closer to one hour, Litt says. In a separate cost analysis, Litt found that determining the cause of chest pain in low-risk patients using a protocol of serial electrocardiograms, serial cardiac enzymes, and nuclear stress testing cost $11,000 to $13,000 per patient in the hospital and $6,500 in the chest 3 3 3 Pulmonary embolism (arrow). pain unit. By comparison, the estimated cost of using a DSCT-based protocol was $3,000 to $3,500. In addition to immediate cost savings, Dual Source CT offers other economic benefits. For example, up to three-quarters of lowrisk patients with chest pain can be dis- “It is important to note that we have scanned patients with heart rates of 90, 100 and 110 beats per minute on the Definition with very positive results.” Michael Gallagher, MD, Cardiologist, William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, Michigan. 6 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine charged immediately after the CT scan, avoiding the cost of further testing and intervention. In addition, relieving the beta-blocker bottleneck means that more patients can be scanned in the CT suite and more patients can be treated in the ED in the course of a day. “Our ED is full almost all of the time, so sending patients home more quickly frees up resources for other patients,” says Litt. Scans for a Wider Range of Patients The Definition successfully images other challenging cardiac patients as well – for example, those with atrial fibrillation and other irregular heart rhythms. Dual Source CT has several advantages over a 64-slice scanner in such patients. First, scan times are so much shorter, it is less likely that variations in heart rate will Cover Story 4 4 Volume rendered image of a dual energy examination of the hands of an adult patient with acute gout. With the dual energy information, deposits of uric acid can be detected within the tophi. Areas of active inflammation additionally show an increased contrast enhancement. occur during the scan. Second, because the Definition does not rely on multisegment reconstruction, it produces highquality images even in patients with irregular heart rhythms. And perhaps most important, a temporal resolution of 83 milliseconds is fast enough to accommodate any heart rate. “We’ve certainly found the dual source scanner to be very useful in allowing us to freeze cardiac motion, even with a variable heart rate,” Litt says. Obese patients are no longer a major challenge to image with the Definition. The ability to use a combined total of 160 kW of power from two independent x-ray sources enables Dual Source CT to overcome tissue attenuation in the chest. In the past, cardiologists at William Beaumont didn’t scan patients with a body mass index (BMI) of 39 or greater – think of a person 5 feet 11 inches tall and weighing 280 pounds – because the im- ages were typically too noisy. Today they are considering relaxing that standard. “With the Definition we get a better signalto-noise ratio in obese patients,” says Gallagher. “In particular, we’ve noted improvements in those who have both a high BMI and a high heart rate – patients who were very difficult to image with the 64-slice scanner,“ says Litt. “We’re scanning pretty much anybody they throw at us now, and getting good-quality studies in almost everybody. The big difference is that we’re much more confident in the diagnoses we make in obese patients.” Increased diagnostic confidence translates into less radiation exposure to the patient. In the Journal of the American College of Cardiology study, William Beaumont researchers found that approximately 11 % of studies performed on the 64-slice CT scanner were uninterpretable as a result of motion artifact, respiratory artifact, an inadequate signal-to-noise ratio as a result of obesity, and other technical factors. Because the Definition produces fewer nondiagnostic scans, fewer patients require nuclear stress testing or cardiac catheterization to determine the physiologic significance of a questionable finding. And although using two x-ray sources might suggest an increase in radiation dose, Dual Source CT can substantially reduce patient exposure for cardiac applications. As the Definition images the heart twice as fast, an adaptive ECG-controlled pulsing can apply the dose necessary in less than half the time. In addition, DSCT adapts the table speed according to the heart rate of the patient, thus automatically reducing cardiac dose at higher heart rates. Besides, the resulting improvement in diagnostic confidence is likely to reduce radiation exposure over the long term. According to Litt, about 20 % of patients who come to the ED with chest pain return to the hospital within a month with the same symptoms. Because emergency physicians have confidence in the reliability of cardiac CT, they are less likely to repeat the scan than they might be with nuclear imaging. “By doing CT, which gives a lot of confidence in a negative study, you’re avoiding the need for further studies down the road and perhaps decreasing the overall radiation that that patient will be exposed to in a lifetime,” Litt says. Dual Energy Imaging Enables new CT Applications Everyone knew that cardiac imaging would leap forward with Dual Source CT. The surprise was how important dual energy imaging would become. Once considered by some to be an intriguing bonus of Dual Source CT, dual energy imaging is quickly becoming a workhorse application in its own right. The ability to simultaneously operate two x-ray sources at different energy levels – and therefore differentiate materials like fat, soft tissue, and contrast agent on the basis of their unique energy-dependent attenuation profiles – is opening the door to a host of clinically useful applications. “We’re ramping up and doing more scans with dual energy every day,” says Johnny Vlahos, MD, an assistant professor of radiology at NYU Medical Center in SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 7 Cover Story New York City. “I suspect we’ll soon be doing the majority of our studies with the dual energy technique.” Since August 2006, Vlahos and his colleagues have scanned perhaps 120 patients using dual energy. One of the most useful dual energy applications in the chest and abdomen is the creation of virtual noncontrast images. This is accomplished by acquiring data at both 80 kV and 140 kV. Because iodine has its maximum attenuation at low energy, the 80 kV dataset can be used to subtract contrast material from the image, creating a virtual noncontrast image, and to compare before and after images to highlight areas of contrast enhancement. This technique has many uses. For example, in an area of the liver that shows increased density on contrast-enhanced studies, differentiation of an abnormal lesion from focal fatty sparing may be difficult. Virtual noncontrast images show the density of the liver before contrast administration, while virtual contrast images depict areas of iodine uptake. Both aid in diagnosis. The NYU team routinely uses a similar technique to assess hyperdense kidney cysts and to differentiate benign and malignant nodules and masses in the liver and kidneys. They are currently evaluating the use of dual energy virtual non-contrast imaging both to simplify CT follow-up of patients who have had treatment for aortic dissection and to reduce radiation exposure. Instead of imaging before contrast administration and during both arterial and delayed phases of contrast enhancement, they are studying whether it is sufficient to acquire only postcontrast delayed-phase images using a dual energy protocol, subsequently creating virtual noncontrast images at the workstation. “There is the potential to move from two to three acquisitions in a single patient to only one acquisition,” says Vlahos. “The 80 kV images are very, very sensitive to iodine. We’ve had cases where a contrast leak has been picked up only on the delayed-phase 80 kV images.” At the University Hospital of MunichGrosshadern, Christoph Becker, MD, routinely uses another dual energy technique: bone removal from CT angiographic studies. Dual energy techniques have markedly simplified bone removal 5A 5B 5 With dual energy it is possible to differentiate kidney stones that require different ways of therapy. Calcium Oxalate Stone (Blue) has to be treated by intervention. Uric Acid Stone (Red) has to be treated with drug therapy. 5B on peripheral run-off studies, he says, taking a laborious and time-consuming manual chore and transforming it into an easy step that takes less than a minute to perform. “The results are amazingly good,” says Becker, an Associate Professor of Radiology and Section Chief of body CT and PET CT. “Dual energy really helps us to create images of the entire vascular territory, from the diaphragm to the toe, without any bony overlay. We are now getting many more demands for this particular application from our referring physicians.” Similarly, dual energy techniques simplify bone removal from the base of the skull, a critical step that enables clear display of the carotid arteries during CT angiography. In patients with suspected pulmonary embolism, Vlahos has begun to routinely perform dual energy imaging to evaluate 8 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine enhancement of the lung parenchyma. This use of lung perfusion mapping in combination with CT pulmonary angiography can assist in pinpointing pulmonary emboli and, perhaps, guiding therapy. “This technique goes beyond direct visualization of the pulmonary artery. It has the potential to improve our physiological understanding of pulmonary embolism,” he says. Becker has found dual energy techniques very useful for visualizing tendons and ligaments, particularly in trauma patients, who will undergo CT scanning in any case. He is also taking advantage of dual energy findings to determine the composition of kidney stones. Those primarily composed of uric acid are best treated conservatively with medication, while other stones need more aggressive management. Uric acid crystals can also accumulate in the joints of patients with Cover Story 6A 6B 6 Long distance peripheral run-off examination with dual energy technique. The ability to show (Fig. 6A) or hide (Fig. 6B) calcified plaque (arrow) allows asessment of the remaining lumen. gout. Dual energy imaging is now providing new information on the source of soft tissue swelling and the extent of joint destruction in advanced gout. Many other dual energy applications are nearing clinical use. Plaque imaging is perhaps the most intensely anticipated. Increasingly sophisticated plaque removal tools can be used to mask calcification and minimize blooming artifact, making it much easier to evaluate the severity of arterial stenosis. Perhaps even more intriguing is the possibility for dual energy techniques to detect inflammation, thereby distinguishing stable from unstable plaques. “I’m pretty amazed at the progress in dual energy techniques in just the last year,” Becker says. “I believe dual energy will become a substantial part of routine scanning for a number of different applications we can’t even conceive of yet.” “I’m pretty amazed at the progress in dual energy techniques in just the last year. I believe dual energy will become a substantial part of routine scanning for a number of different applications we can’t even conceive of yet.” Christoph Becker, MD, Associate Professor of Radiology and Section Chief of body CT and PET CT, Department of Clinical Radiology, University Hospital of Munich, Munich-Grosshadern, Germany Medical writer Catherine Carrington holds a master’s degree in journalism from the University of California Berkeley and is based in Vallejo, CA. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 9 News Professor Gerhard Mostbeck, MD, Department of Radiology, Otto Wagner Hospital and Medical Center, Vienna, Austria. 10 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine News Maximum CT Capabilities in Minimum Space In a discussion with SOMATOM Sessions, Professor Gerhard Mostbeck, MD, Department of Radiology, Otto Wagner Hospital and Medical Center, Vienna, Austria, describes how daily workflow has improved with their new SOMATOM Emotion 16-slice configuration. Interview by Robert Harsieber, PhD Professor Mostbeck, you selected the new SOMATOM® Emotion 16 for your department. What were your criteria? Image quality, of course, is always the primary consideration. But an important issue was also the small space requirement. At our location we have a lot of CT activity, but very restricted space, so we were pleased that we did not need a larger room for the new scanner. Another deciding factor was air-cooling. If we were to convert to water-cooling, we would have to run water pipes through these old walls and then have to deal with the waste water as well, involving a lot of extra costs. With its air-cooling, the Emotion saved us much expense. We were also positively influenced by our previous experience with the Emotion 6-slice configuration that proved to be extremely robust. Many different people operated it and there were hardly ever any problems. We also like the new practical storage box for clinical accessories located close to the patient. To what extent has the new interface influenced your operations? Our radiology technicians now work with pretty much the same interface that they already know from magnetic resonance. On the other hand, Siemens has added a few things that significantly improve patient throughput. For example, there is a menu list that gives the operator the option of saving a patient’s data alongside the scan data, a very practical archiving feature. We also have night shifts that are staffed to some extent by colleagues who come from other clinical backgrounds. In these cases, the “syngo® Expert-i” software is important, because it allows a user on an external computer to access the monitor of the CT. The night operators use this feature to quickly get external, expert opinion when needed. How important are workflow and speed? The elevation from a 6- to 16-slice configuration means a very great improvement in image quality, of course, and, thanks to the new applications, also in diagnostic workflow. This is something we have now grown accustomed to, and we would surely miss this efficiency if it were no longer available for any reason. For example, the biopsy mode and the CT transillumination (CT fluoroscopy) are substantial improvements. And the fact that the scanner reconstructs very rapidly is also an important feature. One can process data and, on a second workstation, inspect, analyze and reconstruct it at the same time. Our clinical routine and throughput are greatly facilitated when we can take the 1,000 or 1,500 image datasets that we make during a routine examination of the thorax and abdomen, and reconstruct them easily and quickly. Which applications are particularly important for you? Except for heart examinations, which are not within the capabilities of our hospital, we conduct a large volume and large variety of computed tomography scans here. Our emphasis is on the lungs, abdomen, neuropsychiatry, orthopedics and similar areas. Our pulmonary center – including thorax surgery and two lung departments – is one of our largest. These need special software tools to analyze CT data. We do many biopsy procedures in the chest and pre-operative wire markings of small pulmonary nodules before they are removed by thoracic surgeons using video assisted thoracic surgery (VATS). CT-guided biopsy or wire marking of small pulmonary nodules less than 1 cm in diameter is challenging. Respiratory movements of the nodule make placement of a biopsy needle a demanding task. Probing with a needle several times for a pulmonary lesion increases the risk of complications like pneumothorax or bleeding. Thus, exact placement of the needle tip in a single step is extremely important. This biopsy mode of the Emotion 16-slice configuration supports us and shortens examination times substantially. It also helps us to reduce the number of X-rays, compared to what we used to do. We were able to determine this after our first 40 or 50 biopsies. Furthermore, there is a new function that helps us to SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 11 News “With the SOMATOM Emotion 16 today’s resolution achieves new dimensions. Today we actually see, for example, things in the lungs that previously we could not detect at all.” Professor Gerhard Mostbeck, MD, Department of Radiology, Otto Wagner Hospital and Medical Center, Vienna, Austria recognize the number and origin of nodules in the lungs. Radiologists are not perfect – we make mistakes – but now we have new computer aided detection (CAD) software that automatically recognizes and marks suspicious structures for us. In what other ways has the SOMATOM Emotion 16-slice configuration been useful? The Emotion provides high image quality as well as software for special applications. For example, neuro-radiology plays a key role in our work here. We support a stroke unit that encounters, on average, one stroke per day. So of course, it is important to be able to image the vessels of the brain. There is also a new solution with which we can subtract the skull bones, and then, from what is left on the scan, graphically bring out and highlight the vessels. That has worked very well in clinical routine, alongside an existing CT perfusion procedure that provides us with hemodynamic information about ischemic brain areas. A stroke is an illness that requires immediate clinical treatment, but does not necessarily show up as a change in a routine CT. With CT-perfusion, we can recognize problems very early. While a conventional CT is still negative, suspicions surface that possible permanent damage is occurring, so we can immediately begin lysis therapy. This is quite significant and practical. Furthermore, the new Emotion 16 is very effective for virtual representations. In radiology today, we try to replace demanding examinations with procedures that are less stressful and invasive. A starting point in the diagnostic framework is to look for colon cancer via a virtual examination of the colon. Another one is to make a “virtual flight” within the bronchial system. With this technology we can offer simulations to our colleagues who later perform the actual surgeries, and they know in advance what they will find when they get there. Another impressive feature of the SOMATOM Emotion 16-slice configuration is that we can select automatic multi-planar reconstructions – coronal and sagittal – from these data. This is, in comparison to the predecessor model, a substantial improvement. One has a better spatial conception through scrolling various planes. When imaging lung cancer, there is definite improvement in the ability to assess tumor infiltration of the lobar fissures or the chest wall. And an additional capabil- Axial thin section CT and coronal MIP: Multiple treein-bud configurations representing small airway disease. Mycoplasma pneumoniae was diagnosed. 12 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine News “Another novelty of the SOMATOM Emotion 16-slice configuration is that we can select automatic multiplanar reconstructions – coronal and sagittal,” says Prof. Mostbeck. ity that is important is that we can fuse PET data from the Department of Nuclear Medicine at the Wilhelminen Hospital here in Vienna with our CT data. This cooperation has a crucial influence on oncology because we often prevent unnecessary operations, which certainly results in better healthcare for the patients. How has rapid technical progress changed your clinical routine? Tremendously. CT is one of the most innovative techniques now in existence. From development of the conventional CT to the single slice spiral CT to multi-detector CT, we are constantly achieving better resolutions and shorter examination times. CT will continue to get better and faster until, one day, it will replace conventional lung X-rays completely because the CT scan, at some point, will take no longer than two seconds. How-ever, this also creates a communications problem. It is no longer a simple matter, when conferring with our clinical colleagues, of hanging up the images and saying, “There is your tumor.” We have enormous datasets, so we need solutions that allow these data to be presented as simply and as three-dimensionally as possible, –offering a usable view of the pathology. That is the essence of CT progress, to be able to reduce the huge volume of data to a simple illustration that I can view, comprehend and diagnose on a computer monitor and then pass on. The applications that we already have available are important in this regard and I am looking forward with great expectations for future developments. Through modern CT technology, we have also learned that radiologists are humans and therefore, not 100% perfect. The expectation that we spot every nodule is, in practice, impossible. As humans, we are incapable of filtering crucial information from these huge data sets that we acquire daily. We are inclined to agree contentedly. Therefore, today’s computer-aided diagnostic systems are important. Diagnosis can be improved substantially by the interaction of humans and technology. In this sense, technology is incorruptible. And with the SOMATOM Emotion, not only is the technology mature, but Siemens also has seriously considered how such questions can be answered. From our point of view, this is the criteria for a well-designed product. What are your thoughts about cumulative radiation? The history of low-dose CT covers only the last seven or eight years. There is a rethinking going on in the radiological world. One increasingly asks oneself, “Do I need the best image quality for each diagnosis?” I think not. I need image quality that permits me to make a diagnosis, but not always the optimum, which, due to physical laws, also is the one that requires the highest dose. With older patients in oncology, this is not such a major concern. But with children, with young women, and with chronically ill people who must be examined again and again, this is clearly important. With low-dose CT solutions like CARE Dose4DTM, the dose level can be fine tuned to the lowest level possible for the image quality required in the patients’ best interest. On the other hand, today’s resolution achieves important and useful new dimensions. That’s true. Today we actually see, for example, things in the lungs that previously we could not detect at all. With 10 –12 mm layers of resolution, a 3 mm nodule went unnoticed; we simply did not see it. Today the spatial resolution is increasingly better, and this is a crucial help to our diagnoses. On the other hand, this creates some additional challenges. The Americans have a name for it: “things you wish you never had seen.” Not everything that one sees is directly responsible for illness. One must say to the patient, you have three nodules, 3 to 5 mm in size, and such nodules are with 95% certainty benign. You tell the patient not to worry, but that he nevertheless must return in six months for another examination to check whether or not the nodules have grown. Patients must learn to deal with this. The process must also be computer assisted, because, with the human eye alone, such developments cannot be accurately measured. Robert Harsieber, PhD, is a freelance business journalist, author, publisher and editor-in-chief of Ärzte EXKLUSIV. He is based in Vienna, Austria. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 13 News Vahid Yaghmai, MD, Associate Professor of Radiology at Northwestern University-Feinberg School of Medicine, Illinois. Let the Computer do it! Fully Automated Tumor Tracking With syngo CT Oncology By David J. Tenenbaum Before data becomes information, it must be thoroughly examined and analyzed. And as CT scanners produce a growing torrent of data, radiologists confront a data-or-information question every day: how to obtain the maximum patient benefit from the hundreds of slices that an advanced CT scanner produces from each patient scan? Rigorous, accurate and repeatable analysis of CT scans is a matter of life and death in oncology, but the sheer quantity of data raises the potential for operator fatigue and even error. And these dangers are multiplied by the regular follow-up studies needed to track tumor response to treatment. But wading through data is precisely why computers were invented. Several years ago, Siemens CT software gained the capability to automatically detect tumors. And now the new syngo® CT Oncology has the capability to automate lesion measurement, and even brings volume calculation into routine tumor evaluation. Quick, Accurate and Consistent In preliminary tests, Vahid Yaghmai, MD, Associate Professor of Radiology at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, says the software matched the best human measurements. “In our experience, we have seen an excellent correspondence between a manual measurement of lymph node and most liver tumors, and the automatic software measurement. It’s very quick, accurate and consistent in measuring lesions using the RECIST (Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors) and WHO (World Health Organization) standards.” Yaghmai is Medical Director of CT at Northwestern Memorial Hospital - Northwestern University, a tertiary care hospital in Chicago with one of 14 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine the largest oncology units in the United States. In May, he reported to the American Roentgen Ray Society that manual and automatic segmentation and measurement of abdominal and pelvic lymph nodes corresponded closely, according to both RECIST and WHO criteria. Similarly, he reported to the Society of Gastrointestinal Radiologists that the software successfully segmented and measured 22 liver lesions on contrast-enhanced CT scans from 12 patients. Fast, accurate and repeatable tumor segmentation and measurement are significant advances, but syngo’s new ability to automatically calculate tumor volume could have equal importance. Studies have already shown that the volume of lung tumors may be valuable for assessing progression or regression; similar studies for liver, bone and brain tumors remain to be done. Although the role of News Greater accuracy may also help resolve long-standing questions about the relative value of RECIST and WHO standards. There is a lot of debate, but a lot of that stems from the issue of human error in manual segmentations. syngo CT Oncology also offers workflow improvements. “In a large oncology center, measuring lymph nodes in multiple dimensions and reporting on multiple lesions in every study is a very time-consuming process,” Yaghmai says. “An automated way of measuring lesions would really improve, the workflow. You decide which lesions to evaluate, and click on as many as you want. Theoretically, somebody who is not a radiologist can look at lesions on a follow-up study.” Volume as a Standard Modality? One click 3D-segementation and size evaluation of liver lesions with syngo CT Oncology. volume in determining tumor status remains subject to further research. “Intuitively, we think it should be important,” says Yaghmai. “But until now, the difficulty of performing volume measurements has limited our ability to validate this.“ Simplified Follow-Ups To obtain automated measurements from the syngo CT Oncology*, a radiologist clicks on the lesion on the display, and immediately receives a readout of x, y, and z dimensions, RECIST and WHO measurements, and lesion volume. If the scan is a follow-up, the system displays previous data on the same lesion, and calculates any dimensional change during the interim. A simplified follow-up is one of the biggest benefits of this new syngo software; there is no need to “find” the same tumor on previous images, and then determine which slice shows the greatest single dimension for RECIST or WHO measurements – those repetitive functions are now all embedded in the software. “When you follow patients based on these measurements, you want consistent and reliable data, and this software gives reliable and consistent information. It virtually eliminates human error and the variations in measurement that can occur when doing it manually,” says Yaghmai. “Despite advances in technology, consistency remains a problem in radiology. There have been many studies showing that measurements of the same lesion by two observers will be different. syngo CT Oncology eliminates that part of the inconsistency.” This improvement may be particularly important in irregular tumors, with poorly defined margins that are difficult to measure. Better Patient Care On the practical level, automated measurement can improve the accuracy of comparisons when patients change hospitals. “Many patients are first imaged at a small community hospital, and we want to standardize the way we are following these tumors; it’s really about better patient care,” says Yaghmai. Automated measurement can also advance the state-of-the-art in oncology, by improving the accuracy of tumor assessment during clinical trials, he adds. There is much push from the National Cancer Institute to standardize the way we follow up tumors. There is a lot of variability in how different centers do follow-up, and we want to standardize how we acquire images and measure these tumors. In the longer term, automated tumor measurement can take radiology firmly into the third dimension. While each component of a CT scan is a two-dimensional slice of the patient’s anatomy, tumors themselves are three-dimensional objects, and the new-found ability to measure volume will allow comparisons to see whether volume, RECIST or WHO is most appropriate for evaluating treatment. Already, data regarding the volume of lung cancer nodules “suggests that volume should be the way to follow treatment,” Yaghmai says. “However, nobody knows what volume means in terms of patient management for tumors of the liver or lymph nodes. Even before the precise role of volume measurements is determined, accuracy and repeatability have value in improving patient care,” says Yaghmai. “We do not want the human factor to be a component of these measurements. It’s better for patient to have realistic information. Whether or not volume becomes a standard modality for evaluating treatment,” Yaghmai says, “software like this will be eventually standard for any follow-up of oncology patients. Previously, the technology was not available, and now it is.” *Pending 510(k): The information about this product is being provided for planning purposes only. This product is pending 510(k) review, and is not yet commercially available in the U.S. David J. Tenenbaum, reports on science, health and environment, and is co-author of Visualizing Human Biology, published by John Wiley and Sons (2007). SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 15 News syngo Circulation - Siemens Scientifically Validated Cardiac CT Software. By Lars Hofmann, MD, Global Clinical Marketing Manager, Cardiac and Acute Care CT, Siemens Medical Solutions, Forchheim, Germany Modern post-processing software tools have gained increasing significance in routine diagnosis over the past years. It is of high importance to offer not only a variety of software features, but at the same time, to validate accuracy and functionality against existing gold standards. Researchers at the University of Munich, Departments of Clinical Radiology and Cardiology, evaluated the accuracy of syngo® Circulation as a quantitative coronary CTA analysis tool in reference to quantitative coronary analysis in conventional angiography*. This makes syngo Circulation the first coronary analysis software to be scientifically validated. The group of Busch et al. concluded that, “the automatic segmentation of the whole coronary artery tree has become routinely feasible and has eased post-processing.” Additionally it is important to note that, “the diagnostic accuracy of CTA can be improved with this software,” which “makes the software a very helpful tool to improve diagnostic accuracy with the quantitative grading of stenosis.” syngo Circulation has reached its third development stage in two years. Major syngo Circulation Plaque Analysis. 16 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine improvements include the completion of the functional and myocardial evaluation as well as improved accuracy and flexibility for quantitative coronary analysis. New plug-ins allow the automatic detection of pulmonary emboli** and the fusion of cardiac CT data with SPECT and PET data. syngo Circulation is the only cardiac CT software that allows the complete cardiac morphology and function evaluation in one single software. * The study of Busch et al. was pre-published as online issue in European Radiology on December 16, 2006. **Not commercially available in the US. Flexibility for the Future – Now One significant advantage of the SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection is its combination of state-of-the-art 64-slice CT imaging capabilities with the dedication to provide an exceptionally streamlined CT workflow. This makes it the premium solution to fulfill todays high end CT expectations. By Tim Friend Radiology workflow at Alamance Regional Medical Center (ARMC) in Burlington, N.C., has entered the jet stream. The vehicle whisking this remarkable community hospital on a wickedly fast ride into the future is SOMATOM® Sensation Web Selection. According to ARMC’s RIS/PACS administrator Chris DeAngelo, this new ride is a fully-loaded package with medical imaging technology and IT features few people have seen before. Siemens describes its SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection as the world’s first Webenabled CT, providing “Zero Delay” Workflow Solution with instant accessibility of 3D volume data to users at any location, 24 hours a day. Getting onboard with SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection marks the second time in two years that ARMC has become first in the world to obtain brand-new CT technology and IT workflow solutions from Siemens. In 2005, ARMC was first to receive the SOMATOM Sensation 40. Now the 238- bed hospital has upgraded the 40-slice machine to a SOMATOM Sensation 64 Web Selection – complete with new hardware and software, and protection against obsolescence. But what DeAngelo says is most noteworthy about the upgrade is that it was done “without a forklift,” using the existing SOMATOM Sensation 40. The entire upgrade, which gives Almance the ability to conduct full cardiac CT angiography with the fastest gantry available on the market, was completed in a day SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 17 Business “Now we can say we have a whole brand-new CT scanner with excellent image quality and the sizzling gantry speed of 0,33 s at minimal investment.” Chris DeAngelo, RIS/PACS administrator, Alamance Regional Medical Center, Burlingtion, N.C. and at a fraction of the cost of buying a new 64-slice machine. “When Web Selection came onto the horizon, we immediately put it into our crosshairs,” DeAngelo says. “We were able to do the upgrade to Web Selection very economically with minimal effort. It was easy on the wallet and an easy install. This made it possible to continue with our initial investment while keeping up with latest technology and with a minimal amount of downtime. Now we can say we have a whole brand-new CT scanner with excellent image quality and the sizzling gantry speed of 0.33 s at minimal investment.” It seems safe to say that ARMC Senior Vice President Carol Hudson, as well as the radiology department she oversees, is enjoying life at the leading edge. “We are very excited. The upgrade to the 64 gives us the increased clinical functionality we needed to move into full cardiac imaging, which all of the big medical centers offer now and whose technology the local community is beginning to ask for,” Hudson says. “But we’re particularly excited about how images can now be acquired. This is certainly going to improve workflow and turnaround for patient results and reporting. We are seeing immediate benefits.” Cutting Edge in CT Imaging and Workflow Alamance is the first hospital in the US to receive the SOMATOM Sensation WebSelection. DeAngelo is delighted to be the first customer to use it. Alamance performs CT for all medical indications, but it has had its eye on cardiac CT angiography. With the SOMATOM Sensation 40 scanner obtained in 2005, the hospital began expanding into cardiovascular imaging, primarily for peripheral arteries and carotids. Now the hospital is planning for cardiac CT angiography, expanding it patient base as the place to be for diagnosing coronary artery disease. SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection addresses exactly these needs, with its advanced imaging capabilities. It offers industry’s highest rotation speed of 0.33 s which is essential to freeze the cardiac motion. At the same time the highest isotropic resolution of 0.33 mm enabled by Siemens unique z-Sharp technology gives the user the ability to see smallest detail such as the entire coronary artery tree or even coronary instent lumen. The combination of both, speed and resolution is key in cardiac imaging. Not only to freeze motion and make smallest details clearly visual for the physicians but especially to image calcified plaques with as little blooming artifacts as possible. Combined with the latest evaluation software, the SOMATOM Sensation is a powerful tool in Cardiac CT. What´s more. DeAngelo says the SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection’s Multimodality workplace is set up with sophisticated post-processing software for a wide variety of functions. “We have a new Multimodality Workplace with advanced post-processing capabili- 18 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine ties such as syngo® Circulation software that enables cardiologists to analyze coronary blood vessels in a very high tech but easy manner. After the CT scan is acquired, the radiologists can do post-processing, analyze their data to generate special cardiac images, and make screen shots or reports. As techs, we will look at the images, isolate blood vessels, calculate the percentage of stenosis, and send those images to PACS,“ says DeAngelo. Besides its superb imaging capabilities, the SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection is designed to deliver a streamlined CT workflow with Zero-Delay from the very beginning of patient preparation to the final diagnosis. It starts with a “smart” feature, CARE Contrast, that allows the technologist to initiate the CT Scan right at the injector in the scan room at one click of a button without having to leave the room. This saves time and increases patient care. It continues with a minimal processing time of images realized by an option called Workstream4D, enabling the direct reconstructions of multiplanar images. A feature, that helps busy departments to get valuable additional information in less time. Even beyond the CT Department the Web Selection offers tools to provide a so called “Zero-Delay” CT workflow. To enable physicians to call for a second opinion or to have a CT Tech call for advice for reconstruction of images, syngo Expert-i is the perfect tool to establish a connection between the workstation and any remote PC instead of having the expert physically come to the workplace. Order Plan & Prepare Patient Preparation Scan & Reconstruct Process Read & Report Distribute Scan Data MultiModality Workplaces + CT Clinical Engines + syngo Expert-i syngo Expert-i (Remote) syngo WebSpace (Clients) Office PC Acquisition Workplace CT Workplace WebSpace Server Home PC/Laptop Shared Database Fast Data Link PACS Archive PACS Reading Workstations With syngo WebSpace 3D data are available anytime and anywhere.* Remote Technology Brings Images Closer Any outside observer at Alamance’s radiology department can see that all is in motion – fluid, linear, traveling at the speed of light – from the moment a CT technician pushes the button on the 64-slice scanner, to the automatic postprocessing of 3D volume data in a dedicated two-terabyte server, to a physician’s click of a mouse only moments later to access the images from any remote location with an Internet connection. According to Hudson, the time patients spend waiting to be scanned and to receive a diagnosis is diminishing. The time technicians previously spent download- ing images from a PACS archive for postprocessing at the Multimodality workplace can now be used in more productive ways. Radiologists and surgeons no longer have to wait in line for the Multimodality workplace to view the highest quality CT images, nor must they waste time and effort switching between the workstation and a personal computer when viewing images in 3D. And that midnight drive from the radiologist’s home to the hospital simply to spend ten minutes reading an image? That’s history, too. “We will see significant costs savings in the long term, but the benefits are immediate. Physicians are able now to access images over the Internet, which is saving everyone time and money,” Hudson says. “From the administrative perspective, Web Selection gives us the ability to continue to be out there on the innovative and up-to-date use of technology, not only for the patient, but for the staff and their work time and input. This gives us efficiency in both arenas. We are fairly sophisticated with technology already, but this takes us up another notch in the technological world.” The SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection, which was introduced by Siemens at RSNA 2006 contains a number of vital components. Perhaps the most glamorous one beside the excellent image quality is a technology called syngo WebSpace. DeAngelo says WebSpace has made it possible to transform any personal com- * Internet connection required. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 19 Business SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection. puter or laptop into a “thin-client” clinical workstation with high-end CT imaging and post-processing capabilities similar to the Multimodality workplace. Rather than having to sit down at a dedicated workstation to access 3D volume data, users gain access from any location over the Internet using a standard broadband connection. Making life even simpler, DeAngelo notes, the system uses the same familiar syngo platform as all Siemens imaging systems. This makes WebSpace easy to learn, because the language is the same and the computer screens are familiar in appearance. Training is a matter of learning a few extra keystrokes, he says. “Like InSpace on Steroids” As a former CT technician and now Alamance’s RIS/PACS guru, DeAngelo is most excited about what most people never see – Web Selection’s hardware server infrastructure and the new imaging software. The state of the art for image processing has been InSpace, which operates with the Multimodality workplace. InSpace, which became available in 2003, changed the landscape from 2D axial images to 3D volume images. In the 19th issue of Siemens’ SOMATOM Sessions magazine, Elliot Fishman said, “WebSpace is sort of like InSpace on steroids. Everything we could do on that workstation with InSpace – on the Multimodality workplace – at a fixed location we can now do anywhere, anytime.* What that means in practical terms is that WebSpace is making 3D data practical for the common man.” Hudson says SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection is transforming the radiology department. While syngo WebSpace resolves a key bottleneck in radiology, namely limited access to Multimodality workplaces, the SOMATOM Sensation WebSpace server has resolved issues with the massive amount of 3D volume data and heavy computing power needed for post-processing and image storage. * Internet connection required. 20 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Business “We will see significant costs savings in the long term, but the benefits are immediate. Physicians are able now to access images over the Internet, which is saving everyone time and money.” Carol Hudson, Senior Vice President of the Alamance Regional Medical Center, Burlington, N.C. Radiologists at Alamance recognized early on the value of 3D imaging for many medical indications compared to standard axial images. The dedicated two-terabyte WebSpace server that DeAngelo oversees receives information instantaneously via a Fast Data Link from the SOMATOM Sensation. New software instantly does the post-processing and makes it available to users via the server’s Web connection. Typically, technicians must download the raw CT volume data onto a workstation from an archival server and do post-processing, which takes time and “chews up an enormous amount on space on my PACS archive,” DeAngelo says. “With the WebSpace server, we have an additional two terabytes worth of space. For me, this will keep the cost of maintaining the main PACS archive down by not overloading it with data. We can store our most current images on the new server and keep our overall costs low.” syngo WebSpace can accommodate five, ten or twenty simultaneous users, depending on an institution’s needs. Alamance’s package provides access for 10 users at any given time. As Alamance becomes a local leader in cardiac CT angiography with its 64-slice scanning capability, DeAngelo sees this as a premium value for cardiologists and heart surgeons. DeAngelo says physicians and surgeons will be able to access 3D images of a patient’s coronary arteries from their personal computers. The images are available almost instantly after they are taken in the radiology suite. Likewise, in those facilities that provide cardiac surgery the cardiac surgeons can view the images on a computer screen in the OR while they operate. DeAngelo says WebSpace also is becoming popular with the hospital’s orthopedic surgeons, who rely on 3D volume data as much as cardiologists. But new applications for WebSpace are essentially limitless. Hudson adds that having access to 3D images over the Web makes the hospital more attractive to patients and to new referring physicians. A patient and physician can view images together on the physician’s computer when discussing a diagnosis and treatment options. Investing in Flexibility in the Future “We were already a filmless radiology department and fairly state of the art. But with SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection we see multiple advantages for us,” DeAngelo says. “There is a huge workflow benefit for everyone, including our radiologists and referring physicians – particularly orthopedic and vascular surgeons.” “ARMC’s continued trust and investment into the SOMATOM Sensation product line shows the success of the technological and clinical capabilities of the system. Alamance’s decision to optimize its busy CT program with the SOMATOM Sensation Web Selection will accelerate the way they can deliver patient care. The ability to scan and post-process patients faster will have a positive impact on patient throughput, especially at peak times or with unexpect- ed ER admissions,” says Jan Chudzik, Product Marketing Manager for the SOMATOM Sensation. “The thin client-based accessibility of 3D images to the physicians anywhere and anytime will help to shorten the overall process of patient diagnosis by cutting out the typical delays of a workstation/PACS-bounded workflow.” For any institution purchasing expensive imaging equipment, flexibility for the future is an important consideration, adds Hudson. The rapid pace of technological evolution can cause million-dollar imaging systems to become outdated in just three to five years. Purchasing the Sensation 40 with knowledge that it could be upgraded to a 64-slice system gave Alamance the flexibility it needed. Siemens’ e-Tune is packaged with Web Selection to offer protection against technological obsolescence. e-Tune guarantees that Alamance receives software and even hardware updates for the next several years. DeAngelo is confident that the hospital made the right choice, saying, “This will carry us quite some time into the future. The Web Selection with e-Tune extends our original investment in 2005 in the Sensation 40 to a total of five years.” Tim Friend, a USA Today reporter for 17 years, is now a freelance science and medical writer based in Alexandria, Virginia. He is the author of Animal Talk: Breaking the Codes of Animal Language, and The Third Domain: The Untold Story of the Archaea and the Future of Biotechnology. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 21 Business Karl Engelhard, MD, Chief of the Department of Radiology at the Martha-Maria Hospital in Nuremberg, Germany. Although the Martha-Maria Hospital is a confessional clinic with only 330 beds, it is able to compete with much larger hospitals. Big Progress for a Small Clinic Elevating to a new SOMATOM Sensation scanner has paid off for a hospital in southern Germany, delivering more patients, more revenues and better, faster diagnoses. By Frank A. Miltner “In CT diagnostics, we are clearly a step ahead,” says Karl Engelhard, MD, Chief of Radiology at the Martha-Maria Hospital in Nuremberg, Germany. Since the beginning of 2007, this small, confessional clinic of only 330 beds has been able to compete with much larger hospitals. And competition is fierce: about a dozen other small hospitals, a university clinic, and an urban hospital with 2,000 beds are available to patients in the Nuremberg metropolitan area, with its some two million inhabitants. “This significant progress for a small hospital was made possible by up- grading their existing Siemens single slice CT to a new multislice, spiral, computed tomography scanner, the SOMATOM® Sensation 40-slice configuration from Siemens Medical Solutions.” Word traveled fast about the acquisition of the 40-slice CT. Just three months after installation of this high-end system, the number of CT scans had risen nearly 20 % to the present level of about 1,600 per year. Primarily private patients come to the small hospital, some from as far as 100 kilometers away, for complex pre-clinical diagnoses. “We won’t have firm statis- 22 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine tics on this for another few months,” notes Engelhard, “but the trend in numbers of scans is clearly rising.” Also helping the trend climb is the small radiology team’s new ability to continuously further extend its diagnostic spectrum. Money (Also) Talks Healthcare, of course, is the primary consideration but no clinic today can afford to ignore financial matters. “Siemens helped to make our move to multislice CT happen through their Business The diagnosed ureteral tumor stands out (arrow) as do the contrasting white areas in the kidney and the ureter. “Only this morning we discovered a ureter tumor that we would not have recognized with our old equipment,” Engelhard says. attractive offering including the buy-back of our old scanner.“ And the investment of several hundred thousand euros – obviously still a significant sum for a small hospital, amortizes itself at various levels. There are already cooperative agreements with established physicians who now send their patients to Martha-Maria instead of to the large urban hospital in Nuremberg or to the University Clinic at Nuremberg-Erlangen. And of course the diagnostic spectrum has been greatly extended, compared to that of the previous scanner, an eightyear-old, single slice, spiral CT. In MarthaMaria Hospital, the main benefactors of the new scanner are oncology, gastroenterology, urology, orthopedics and cardiology. All benefit from temporally and spatially highly-resolved oncological and cardiological diagnostics, for example, and with virtual colonoscopy and three-dimensional representations of arthritic changes. The new equipment brings additional revenues as well as better conditions for patients. Radiation exposure is clearly reduced, and the time a patient must spend in the scanner is a fraction of what it used to be. This eases discomfort for the many patients who come for scans with breathing difficulties and other problems. For example, where the old single slice system needed five or six minutes for a chest cage CT, the new one needs only 15 seconds – and it delivers markedly better results. True to the Mission of its Benefactor Not surprisingly, this cuts costs. The new CT does not require additional personnel. On the contrary – the four physicians and seven technicians in the radiology department now have more time for other diagnostic procedures and for their patients. For the Martha-Maria Hospital, this brings an ethical bonus: its benefactor is the Protestant Mission Martha-Maria, which operates on the principal of brotherly love and puts people at the center of its clinical work. The chief of radiology’s delight in his new clinical capability is clearly noticeable. “Thanks to multi-planar reconstruction with thin collimation and temporally highly-resolved contrast dynamics,” he says. “Only this morning, we discovered a ureter tumor that we would not have recognized with our old equipment.” Early discovery gives the patient a critical advantage, because this sort of tumor is aggressive and spreads easily. The SOMATOM Sensation 40’s industry‘s highest spatial resolution, its fast, accurate localization allows a rapid, low-risk surgical plan to remove it. Political reform of the healthcare system has, in the past few years, intensified competition among German hospitals. While some hospitals respond by cutting back on services, Martha-Maria is trying another approach: it is positioning itself as a specialist where quality comes first – and the SOMATOM Sensation 40 plays a central role. “The marketing effect of this scanner generates a positive influence on the economics of the entire hospital,” contends Engelhard. The improved preclinical diagnostics even bring in extra patients on their own initiative. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 23 Business Custom-Made Advantages “The choice of a Siemens CT also turned out to be a great advantage when it came to installation,“ says Engelhard. In this instance, Martha-Maria had some very exacting, demanding requirements. Planning was to begin only in late summer 2006, yet installation and full functionality had to be completed by December 31 – because on the next day, January 1st, 2007, Germany’s value-added tax would increase from 16 % to 19 %. This was a literal case of “time is money.” So Siemens Medical Solutions installed the new equipment during the week between Christmas and New Year, a time when little business is conducted and when most other service companies are on holiday. “The hospital administration could not afford to have long down times in CT diagnostics,” notes Engelhard. Moreover, Siemens purchased the old equipment and user training was com- pleted within a few days. “One must strongly emphasize: as a small hospital with limited resources, we were very glad that Siemens could offer us such a custom-made solution.” Frank A. Miltner is a Munich-based media consultant and a scientific and medical journalist. He is a former editor of the German magazine Focus and editor-in-chief for Lifescience.de and Netdoktor.de as well as the author of several books. A Workhorse as well for Cardiology Interview with Falk Karsten Pohle, MD, Chief of Cardiology, Martha-Maria Hospital, Nuremberg, Germany Dr. Pohle, you strongly supported the purchase of the SOMATOM Sensation 40-slice configuration. Why this particular scanner? I have worked for many years with Siemens CTs, and I know very well that I can rely on them and their high image quality in addressing cardiological questions. This CT is a true workhorse. Of course, it is obvious that this 40-slice CT, compared to our old single slice system, represents a quantum transition for our non-invasive heart diagnostics, not only for our patients and for our small hospital, but also for the whole region. Among nonuniversity clinics, at present we have no competition. What has changed for the patients? We can, for example, rule out coronary diseases, conduct artery hardening analyses, recognize soft plaques, and diagnose patients with small and middle pre-test probability or middle PROCAM risk to the extent that preventive measures can then be introduced. With this CT, we not only work more accurately, but also spare many patients the discomfort of a heart-catheter examination. What has changed for your cardiology department? Our reputation has grown noticeably, patient numbers have increased, and we now have a cooperative program with established cardiologists. Word spread about our cardio CT, and patients have begun to ask about it. This CT not only improves the quality and thus the reputation of our Department of Cardiology, it also provides for significant hospital revenues. It has been only three months since we introduced the new equipment, and we are fully on budget with our financial plans. The investment was worthwhile for us in all respects. Falk Karsten Pohle, MD: “With this CT, we not only work more accurately, but also spare many patients the discomfort of a heart-catheter examination.“ 24 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Business Cardiac CT Takes Off Detecting coronary artery disease in its asymptomatic stage is one of the greatest challenges a cardiologist faces. The flight surgeons of the German Air Force have had tremendous success in this area, as they have developed a method using computed tomography for early diagnosis of the disease in pilots. This unique method has gained increasing recognition in aeromedicine worldwide. By Sonja Fischer, Siemens Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany Just as the captain of the Boeing 757 has safely taken off, he feels a sharp pain in his chest. He is panting for air. In his field of vision, the controls blur with the decreasing landscape below, and before he has a chance to set up radio communica- tion with the control tower operators, he collapses and is not able to continue navigating the aircraft. What sounds like a real horror-scenario actually took place in February of this year in a Continental Airlines aircraft. Fortunately, the copilot was able to safely land the aircraft and none of the passengers was harmed. The captain, however, died from the consequences of his heart attack. Coronary artery disease (CAD) is still the most frequent cause of death in the industrialized SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 25 this reason, diagnosing CAD at an early, asymptomatic stage is important for us as flight surgeons so that we can prevent any acute coronary syndrome that could have immediate consequences for the pilot and aircraft.” Extraordinary Exposure for Jet Pilots Thanks to its high sensivity and specificity, DSCT has become increasingly recognized in international aviation medicine when diagnosing CAD in asymptomatic pilots at the German Heart Center, Munich, Germany. “In terms of accelerated temporal resolution, SOMATOM Definition sets groundbreaking standards.” Stefan Martinoff, MD, Director, Institute for Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, German Heart Center, Munich, Germany world, and can cause what in aviation is feared as ‘sudden incapacitation in flight’. Now, a specialized strategy should prevent these events in both military and civil aviation. This is what Christoph Wonhas, MD, an internal specialist and cardiologist at the German Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine in Fürstenfeldbruck, Germany, sees as his most important task. “The prevention of fatal occurrences or sudden incapacitation is critical to ensuring flight safety,” he stresses. “For 26 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine For jet pilots, a “sudden incapacitation in flight” can be particularly dangerous. They often fly alone and, in case of a heart attack, there would be no one to safely land the aircraft. In addition, specific conditions in the cockpit further cause physical stress: extreme heat, hypoxia, and high accelerating forces that push blood from the head into the legs and can shift internal organs up to 15 centimeters. These conditions increase the danger of an acute coronary event in persons with arteriosclerosis. However, within the clinical aeromedicine department in Fürstenfeldbruck, Wonhas is responsible for more than just the aeromedical assessment of military pilots. As Assistant Director of the German Air Force’s ‘Aeromedical Center,’ which has been accredited for civil aviation, he also assesses pilots from major German airlines on behalf of the German Federal Office for Civil Aeronautics. He is currently stationed at the US Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine in Texas, taking part in continuing aeromedical education. There, the significance of CAD for aeromedicine has been confirmed for Wonhas. Statistics from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the civil aviation authority in the US, indicate that pilot autopsies have shown a higher-than-average percentage of coronary heart disease. From 1980 to 1982, the agency examined 710 deceased pilots. Of those, 3 % showed severe, and 66 % showed minimal to moderate coronary heart disease. Only 31 % had no indications of arteriosclerosis of the coronary arteries. “In Germany, we do not have such large sets of statistics, because fewer people are actively flying. Therefore, there are far fewer fatalities,” says Wonhas. “However, forensic doctors at the German Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine have observed a similar situation, and several autopsies have found more or less severe CAD or stenosis.” As a result, the flight surgeons began to search for a reliable method of detecting Business the disease early to help prevent sudden inflight incapacitation. Cardiac Health: Strict Guidelines for Pilots In aeromedicine, bicycle ergometrics is recognized as the essential stress test for the health and fitness of pilots. With respect to CAD, however, ergometrics do not enable diagnosis until a stage that shows changes in the electrocardiogram (ECG) due to ischemia. Yet before the coronary blood flow becomes insufficient, the stenosis diameter has to reach 50 %. This means that ergometrics are of significant value for assessing patients at risk. However, during routine screening of young, asymptomatic patients with a low coronary risk score like Framingham and PROCAM Score, as is the case of most pilots, this method has a coronary heart disease hit rate of only 21 %. In addition, the European JAR-FCL3 guidelines (Joint Aviation Requirements for Flight Crew Licensing) can disqualify pilots with a lumen occlusion of 30 %. As such, for aviation it is very important to be able to determine CAD in asymptomatic subjects without high-degree stenosis. Until now, invasive coronary angiography has been the gold standard. However, physicians do not want to subject asymptomatic patients to the risks associated with this examination every time there is a new, but insignificant conspicuity in a stress ECG. “Furthermore, we have found myocardial scintigraphy, which is used regularly in American aeromedicine, to be unsuitable for detecting CAD in our pilots because it does not enable display of the coronary arteries,” says Wonhas. “However, with multislice computed tomography (MSCT), we found a fast, secure, and cost-effective method for displaying the coronary arteries of asymptomatic pilots in suspicious cases without having to risk an invasive catheter examination. This was a method we wanted to use,” he remembers. Effective Cooperation in Cardiac CT For this reason, the German Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine looked for a suitable cooperation partner in diagnostic cardiology and high-resolution cardiac CT, and found that partner in the German Heart Center in Munich (DHM). The DHM is one of the leading cardiac centers in Europe, and was one of the first facilities to use MSCT technology on the heart. The center has been equipped with state-of-the-art CT scanners from Siemens since 2002. The first MSCT system that the center used was SOMATOM® German Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine The German Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine in Fürstenfeldbruck is the central aeromedical facility for the German Army, Air Force, and Navy. Its job encompasses the selection, examination, and aerophysiological instruction of aircraft crews for the German Armed Forces. It is also responsible for investigating aviation accidents, ergonomics, aerophysiology, and dealing scientifically with aeromedical problems. The primary tasks are performed in the following six departments: Research, Science and Education, Air and Space Medicine Clinical Aeromedicine ■ Forensic Medicine and Aviation Accident Medicine ■ Flight Psychology ■ Ergonomics ■ Aerophysiology ■ ■ The Clinical Aeromedicine Department, where MSCT diagnostics are used as a noninvasive cardiac examination procedure under the direction of Christoph Wonhas, MD, is the largest depart- ment. It is an interdisciplinary, polyclinical diagnostic center with eight specialist groups: Internal Medicine, Orthopedics, Neurology and Psychiatry, Ophthalmology, Ear-Nose-Throat, Dentistry, Diagnostic Radiology, and Central Lab. Their task is to examine and assess the medical suitability of all candidates for military flight service. This includes follow-up examinations on approximately 3,300 army, navy, and air force pilots and weapon systems officers for deployment on military aircraft. The institute uses equipment of the highest standard. Since 2003, the German Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine has also served as the Aeromedical Center (AMC) for civil aviation on the order of the German Federal Office for Civil Aeronautics. As a result, frequent fliers such as Lufthansa captains, hobby pilots, and flight attendants now round off the patient spectrum. Source: German Air Force SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 27 Business “MSCT is a fast, secure, and costeffective method for displaying the coronary arteries of asymptomatic pilots in suspicious cases, without having to risk an invasive catheter examination.” Christoph Wonhas, MD, Internist and Cardiologist, Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine, Fürstenfeldbruck, Germany Sensation 16, which was later upgraded to a 64-slice system. This was then replaced by the latest high-end CT system from Siemens in the summer of 2006: SOMATOM Definition. Stefan Martinoff, MD, Director of the Institute for Radiology and Nuclear Medicine at DHM, and Jörg Hausleiter, MD, cardiologist at the Department of Cardiovascular Diseases, both helped to develop this innovative method for using MSCT in aeromedical assessments. Martinoff is impressed by the new SOMATOM Definition. “With this system, we took the opportunity to accelerate cardiac imaging in terms of temporal resolution. In this area, the new Dual Source CT sets a groundbreaking standard. The system is much easier on the patient, and it is easier for us to perform significant, high quality coronary CT examinations,” states the radiologist. “In addition to the resolution, which at 82 milliseconds is twice as fast, there is a whole range of hightech features that make the Definition an excellent system for vascular and cardiac examinations.” For Wonhas, computed tomography angiography (CTA) using SOMATOM Definition is the method of choice for aeromedical assessments: “The primary advantage is the high negative predictive value of almost 100 %. With respect to flight safety, we can now rule out whether an asymptomatic pilot is suffering from coronary heart disease with greater certainty.” From a cardiological perspective, Hausleiter particularly stresses the advantages of CTA as a noninvasive method to identify plaque-accumulation in the coronary arteries. “Due to the high spatial and temporal resolution of CTA imaging, we can show calcified as well as noncalcified plaque.” During plaque rupture, blood clots occur which can consequently cause a heart attack. Therefore, Hausleiter assumes that these deposits – especially the noncalcified – will, in the future, be increasingly considered for the diagnosis of arteriosclerosis in asymptomatic patients with low to intermediate risk to suffer from CAD like the pilots. Reliable Diagnosis in Asymptomatic Pilots Since 2003, Wonhas and his colleagues have been using MSCT in aeromedical assessments with the support of DHM. As in the past, they routinely perform ergometrics at the Institute of Aviation Medicine once annually as a screening method. Now, however, if changes are noted in the ECGs and ergometrics when compared to those from the previous year – for example, a new, higher-grade arrhythmia or new ST segment changes – the physicians authorize additional, noninvasive examinations. This means that a transthoracal echocardiogram (TTE) is performed 28 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine after ergometrics to rule out structural heart diseases such as cardiomyopathy or cardiac valve disease. On the same day, the colleagues at DHM perform the MSCT examination on the affected pilot. This procedure has proven to be extremely effective. From 2003 to 2004, exactly 3,409 flight crew members were examined and retrospectively evaluated in a study. In 1.73 % of cases (59 pilots), results proved to be suspicious and required further examination. “Fortunately, we were able to rule out coronary heart disease in 85 % of them. However, we did find coronary artery disease in nine persons, with stenoses up to 90 %, and these were all asymptomatic pilots with a PROCAM Score of about only 5 %,” says Wonhas. This perspective of the physician comes from 20 years clinical experience as an internal specialist in an intensive care unit. In 2003, during his flight certification (flight surgeons in the German Air Force are required to fly on a case-by-case basis), Wonhas, too, had suspicious ergometrics while being asymptomatic. CTA was performed, and the findings were normal. “Therefore, I have a different perspective. I understand the problem as an invasive cardiologist, but also as a patient,” says Wonhas. Martinoff of DHM can confirm that Wonhas makes sensible patient selections for the examination based on his experience: “Given the hundreds of pilots in the German Air Force, the small num- Business 2 1A 1B 1C 1D 1 If irregularities occur in the resulting electrocardiogram (Fig. 1A), CTA is performed on the same day at the German Heart Center (Figs. 1B - 1E). Exemplary findings (above) from Wohnas‘ CTA test in 2003 which ruled out CAD for him. ber that Wonhas sent to us to be examined in 2003 and 2004 had a relatively high hit rate. The subsequent procedure confirmed that the approach we are using makes sense.“ International Recognition in Aeromedicine Based on the results presented by Wonhas and colleagues, the German Armed Forces have since recognized CTA with MSCT as the diagnostic procedure for their flying service, and use it as routine. The Federal Office for Civil Aeronautics, the highest monitoring agency for aviation in Germany, has also accepted this method because of its high negative predictive value. Internationally, NATO (North Atlantic 1E 2 Routine investigation at the Institute of Aviation Medicine includes bicycleergometrie as indispensable stress test. Treaty Organization) has begun working with MSCT to diagnose CAD. Wonhas is convinced of the value of MSCT in aeromedical assessments, and hopes it will be quickly implemented in aviation internationally to prevent harm. “To date, in 85 % of asymptomatic patients with a newly occurring higher-grade ventricular arrhythmia or non-conclusive new ST depression, our examination has clearly demonstrated that their hearts are healthy. On the other hand, in 15 % of cases, we discovered coronary artery disease at an early stage. All of these patients were able to receive special approval to fly once they began treatment. For the pilot, this means minimizing the risk of a heart attack before it happens. He can be there for his family, and the Armed Forces or civilian airline will continue to benefit from his expertise. As a result, our method makes a lot of sense.” SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 29 Clinical Outcomes Cardiovascular Case 1 Heterotopic Heart Transplant With Arrhythmic Heart Rate of 45 –125 bpm1,2 and Post-Surgical Control with Cardiac CT By Shu-Hsun Chu, MD, Cardiovascular Center, Far Eastern Memorial Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan HISTORY A 52-year-old man suffered for two years from dyspnea on exertion and chest tightness. Because progressive symptoms failed to respond to medical treatment, the patient was admitted for heart transplantation evaluation. In April 2001, a 48-year-old head injury donor with good cardiac function passed the brain-death examination. During transport of the donor to the Far Eastern Memorial Hospital, cardiac arrest occurred. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation was performed immediately in the ambulance. When the donor arrived at the hospital, his blood pressure was 60/30 mm Hg, and heart rate 36 bpm. An immediate sternotomy revealed that the heart was already arrested, distended and cyanotic. The donor was soon put on 1 1 VRT display shows the heterotopic transplanted heart on the patient’s right side and the native heart on the left. 30 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Cardiovascular Clinical Outcomes 2 2 ECG trace shows patient’s very high and irregular heart rate of 45–125bpm. Despite the unfavourable heart rate, both hearts and coronary arteries could be displayed free of motion. cardio-pulmonary bypass (CPB). After that, the heart started to beat again and could maintain a stable hemodynamic status even when CPB was weaned off. Since the suitability of the resuscitated heart as orthotopic heart transplant was unclear, the hospital decided to do a heterotopic heart transplantation. Five years after successful surgery the patient is in good condition. COMMENTS AND DIAGNOSIS Using the SOMATOM® Definition for a recent follow-up exam, it could be clearly determined that both hearts were functional, but with different heart rates and rhythms. SOMATOM Definition’s high temporal resolution of 83 msec in combination with reliable ECG-editing functionality was of crucial importance in obtaining diagnostic images of the rapidly changing heart rates between 45 and 125 bpm. 3 3 Maximum Intensity Projection (MIP) image shows the artifacts free coronary arteries of the native heart (arrow heads) and the right coronary artery of the transplanted heart (arrow). EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Scanner SOMATOM Definition Scan area Aortic arch to diaphragm Scan length 205 mm Scan time 16.3 s Scan direction Cranio-caudal Heart rate Arrhythmic 45–125 bpm kV 120 kV Effective mAs 400 mAs/rot Rotation time 0.33 s Temporal resolution HR independent 83 msec Slice collimation 0.6 mm Spatial resolution 0.33 mm Slice width 0.75 mm Pitch 0.22 Reconstruction increment 0.4 mm Kernel B26 References 1 Cp. Chiu KM, Lin TY, Chu SH. Successful Heterotopic Heart Transplantation after Cardiopulmonary Bypass Rescue of Arrested Donor Heart. Transplantation Proceedings 2006; 38: 1514–1515. 2 Cp. Chiu KM, Lin TY, Li SJ, Chan CY, Chu SH. Hybrid Pulmonary Artery Conduit Angioplasty for Heterotopic Heart Transplantation. Transplantation Proceedings 2006; 38: 1538–1540. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 31 Clinical Outcomes Cardiovascular Case 2 Reliable In-Stent Lumen Visualization With Dual Source CT Coronary Angiography By Annick C. Weustink, MD, and Nico R. Mollet, MD, PhD, Departments of Radiology and Cardiology, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands HISTORY A 58-year-old man with a history of hypertension and hypercholesterolemia was admitted to the hospital with symptoms of suspected stable angina pectoris. The patient was referred to conventional coronary angiography after a positive exercise-ECG test. Conventional angiography showed significant stenoses at the level of the proximal right coronary artery (RCA) and the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD). Percutaneous intervention was undertaken and one bare-metal stent in the RCA and two overlapping bare-metal stents in the LAD were successfully implanted. The patient was referred to follow-up CT coronary angiography after 18 months. DIAGNOSIS The patient was scanned on a Dual Source CT (DSCT) scanner. Nitroglycerine was administered prior to the CT scan; however, the patient did not receive prescan beta-blockers. The patient had a heart rate of 76 beats/minute during the CT scan. DSCT coronary angiography was able to reliably rule out the presence of in-stent restenosis in both the RCA and LAD stents. COMMENTS The SOMATOM® Definition CT scanner uses two X-ray sources and two detectors at the same time. This is one of the important features for cardiac CT scanning. It allows scanning of the heart with a heart- rate-independent temporal resolution of 83 ms. As a result, high-quality images of the rapidly-moving coronary arteries are obtained even with higher heart rates. Moreover, the adaptive pitch and use of prospective ECG-tube modulation allows significant reduction of the radiation exposure during cardiac CT scanning, especially with higher heart rates. This example shows clear delineation of the stents with excellent visualization of the in-stent lumen without the need for pre-scan beta-blockers in a patient with a heart rate of 76 beats/minute. It demonstrates the potential of DSCT coronary angiography to rule out the presence of in-stent restenosis in follow-up patients after percutaneous intervention procedures. EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Scanner SOMATOM Definition Scan area Heart Scan length 103 mm Scan time 7,3 sec Scan direction Caudo-cranial Heart rate 76 bpm kV 120 kV mAs / Rot 400 mAs/rot Rotation time 0.33 sec Temporal resolution HR independent 83 msec Slice collimation 0.6 mm Spatial resolution 0.33 mm Pitch 0.32 Reconstructed slice thickness 0.75 mm Increment 0.4 mm Prospective ECG-tube modulation On, window: 30 – 60% CTDIvol 45,31 mGy Kernel B46f Contrast material volume 90 ml Flow rate 5,5 ml/s Bolus tracking On 32 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Cardiovascular Clinical Outcomes 1 1 Volume Rendered CT image showing the stents in the proximal-to-mid LAD and the mid part of the RCA. 2 3 2 3 Curved multiplanar CT images showing excellent visualization of the in-stent lumen of both the RCA (Fig. 2) and LAD (Fig. 3) stents, thereby reliably ruling out the presence of in-stent restenosis. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 33 Clinical Outcomes Cardiovascular Case 3 SOMATOM Definition Abdominal CTA With Direct Dual Energy Bone Subtraction By Alec J. Megibow MD, MPH, FACR and Johnny Vlahos, MD, Department of Radiology, NYU Medical Center, New York, USA HISTORY DIAGNOSIS COMMENTS A 75-year-old man was referred for presurgical MDCT evaluation of a known abdominal aortic aneurysm that had been detected on screening abdominal ultrasound. A contrast enhanced CTA scan of the abdomen was performed on the SOMATOM® Definition. The acquisition parameters allowed precise localization of the origin of the aneurysm with respect to the renal arteries and allowed for necessary measurements of the neck of the aneurysm, the distance from the renal arteries to the aortic bifurcation and to each common iliac bifurcation to be calculated, and the adequacy of the run-off to the lower extremities to be assessed. Finally, a small accessory renal artery supplying the upper pole of the right kidney was detected. Based on this single study, the patient was considered a candidate for endovascular repair. The scanning protocol (outlined below) utilized the Definition’s dual x-ray sources, each operating at a different kVp thereby resulting in a simultaneous dual energy acquisition. Two spiral data sets are acquired in a single acquisition; each data set contains unique spectral information, which allows differentiation and characterization of imaged structures and tissue (Fig.1). In this dual energy application, the direct subtraction of bone can be achieved almost instantly with a high degree of accuracy as compared with conventional bone removal techniques. 1 1 Precise visualization of the abdominal aneurysm and their relations to skeletal landmarks is possible with the SOMATOM Definition. 34 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Cardiovascular Clinical Outcomes EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Additionally, critical small vessels such as an accessory right upper pole renal artery can be easily preserved. Using dual energy acquisitions, abdominal CTA segmentations can be performed, eliminating manual post processing steps and thereby significantly reducing reporting time. The degree of bone segmentation is at the discretion of the radiologist; in this example, the dual display allows the vascular map to be superimposed over the skeletal structures. This aids the surgeon in establishing landmarks that can aid in the fluoroscopic based endovascular repair. The success of the bone removal is illustrated in the MIP image (Fig. 2). Scanner SOMATOM Definition Scan area Abdominal CT Angiography Scan length 410 mm Scan time 12 sec Scan direction Caudo-cranial kV 140 kV and 80 kV Effective mAs 66 eff. mAs and 190 eff. mAs Rotation time 0.5 sec Slice collimation 0.6 mm Spatial resolution 0.33 mm Slice width 2 mm Reconstructed slice thickness 2 mm Increment 1.5 mm CTDIvol 10.7 mGy Kernel D20f Contrast material volume 100 ml Flow rate 4 ml/s Bolus tracking On 2 3 2 Dual Energy MIP of the abdominal vasculature allows immediate rule out of aneurysms, stenosis or embolism. Notice the lack of interference from bones. 3 Dual Energy VRT, excellent visualization of the abdominal skeleton. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 35 Clinical Outcomes Oncology NEW: syngo CT Oncology Designed to Take the Guesswork out of Routine Oncology Imaging! By Louise A. McKenna, PhD, MBA, Global Clinical Marketing Manager, CT Oncology, Siemens Medical Solutions, Forchheim, Germany Siemens’ newest software for routine CT oncology imaging, syngo® CT Oncology, has radiologist’s daily needs in mind. Designed to take the guesswork out of routine lesion evaluation, syngo CT Oncology** offers automated tools for tumor evaluation including automated measurement of RECIST and WHO criteria, lesion volume plus tumor burden. Fully automated lesion matching speeds up the follow-up process with automatic generation of percentage-growth and doubling time helping to improve reliability and confidence. The new software offers dedicated workflows, so called autopilots, for the evaluation of lung and liver lesions, plus lymph nodes. For the identification and evaluation of lung lesions, the lung autopilot incorporates Siemens’ clinically proven Lung CAD* software with auto-preprocessing. This means that as soon as the reconstructed image data arrives at the syngo workplace, potential lesions are automatically detected off-line and the results are ready to review when the radiologist opens the exam, saving valuable time and enhancing diagnostic confidence. Oneclick lesion segmentation results in automatic generation of standard tumor eval- uation parameters such as RECIST, WHO and tumor burden, plus the 3D volume. The DICOM SR (and RT) compatible report can be saved to PACS for follow-up. For follow-up exams, automated lesion matching helps the clinician to locate previously identified lesions quickly and easily. Previously generated lesion size parameters are instantly available for comparison, growth is automatically calculated and the results are presented in an intuitive tabular form (Fig.1). syngo CT Oncology lymph node evaluation uniquely offers clinician a fully automated workflow for the evaluation of lymph nodes. One-click 3D-segmentation of user identified lymph nodes results in automatic calculation of the RECIST, WHO and volume measurements. Lesion details are automatically saved to a DICOM SR and can be used for fast, accurate followup for staging and treatment monitoring (Fig.2). “This software presents considerable opportunities for improvement of diagnostic outcomes”, explains Axel Küttner MD, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany. “In a recent follow-up exam, an enlarged lymph node was identified as suspicious. Automated lesion matching assisted in the rapid identification of the same, very much smaller lymph node in the previous exam. The automated measurement should also help to further reduce reader variability, enabling us to achieve even better diagnostic outcomes”. The evaluation and follow-up of liver lesions follows the same automated workflow as for lung lesions and lymph nodes, helping to ensure easy integration of this software into daily clinical routine diagnostic oncology imaging, staging and follow-up (Fig.3). syngo CT Oncology also incorporates image fusion functionality for example for PET-CT imaging, with fully automated image registration, clinicians can readily match form with function helping to achieve more confident diagnostic decisions. syngo CT Oncology will be available with syngo 2008A software in September 2007. *syngo Lung CAD is not designed to be used as a first-reader. **Pending 510(k): The information about this product is being provided for planning purposes only. This product is pending 510(k) review, and is not yet commercially available in the U.S. 1 1 Follow-up of a lung lesion. Growth parameters are generated at the touch of a button. A comprehensive results table includes growth parameter for all lesions including doubling time and tumor burden. Courtesy of Marco Das, MD, RWTH Aachen, Germany. 36 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Oncology Clinical Outcomes 2 2 2 2 Identification and follow-up of lymph nodes (follow-up exam on the left). Courtesy of Axel Küttner, MD, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany. 3 Follow-up of a liver lesion. Courtesy of Anno Graser, MD, University Hospital of MunichGrosshadern, Munich,, Germany. 3 3 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 37 Clinical Outcomes Oncology Case 4 Improved Evaluation and Follow-up of Routine Diagnostic Oncology Exams With syngo CT Oncology* By Axel Küttner, MD, and Alexander Aplas, MD, Institute of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany Diagnostic, staging and follow-up exams for tumors are among the most frequent CT exams performed in many radiology departments. For the University of Erlangen, oncology related imaging represents approximately 60% of the daily CT workload. To date, exams are read and evaluated in 2D, employing manual measurement and reporting of lesions. For follow-up exams, previously reported lesions must be manually located, and are often re-measured for size comparison with the current exam. This relatively time-consuming manual process is therefore prone to intra- and inter-reader variability, with the potential for sub-optimal outcomes. 1 1 Identification of 3 intraabdominal lesions and 1 of 2 lung lesions marked for 3 month follow-up. Lesions can be viewed in axial, coronal, sagittal and VRT views. Basic lesion parameters are presented in a DICOM SR compatible report. Lung lesions were identified in the same dataset by switching to a lung window. 38 Recently a number of automated or semiautomated 2D/3D, and CAD software tools have become available to assist in the evaluation, reporting and follow-up of lung and colon lesions. These have proved extremely useful in improving diagnostic outcomes, delivering reliable performance in everyday clinical routine – increasing reader confidence and shortening evaluation time.1–3 However, these automated tools do not cover the evaluation of lymph nodes and liver nodules, for example, which together with the evaluation of lung lesions are the bread and butter imaging of clinical routine. syngo® CT Oncology* is a new software, which offers automated workflows for 1B the 3D evaluation and follow-up of tumors in the liver and in the lung, incorporating lung CAD. There is also a dedicated algorithm for lymph nodes, plus a generic algorithm for other tumors throughout the body – such as malignant melanoma, as in the case presented here. HISTORY A 70-year-old man underwent a routine follow-up CT exam at three months while undergoing chemotherapy for malignant melanoma. The software facilitates 3D lesion segmentation and delivers standard lesion parameters: RECIST, WHO and volume (Fig. 1). The automated lesion Oncology Clinical Outcomes 3 EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Scanner 3 Significantly increased tumor burden is marked in red in the report. The percental change in RECIST, WHO, 3D volume and doubling time of all lesions are automatically calculated and included in the DICOM SR compatible report. matching marked previously reported lesions in the follow-up exam and the percental change in lesion parameters were automatically calculated and sent to the DICOM SR (Fig. 2). Doubling time and tumor burden are also automatically calculated and as a useful eye catcher, tumor burden is highlighted in red, demonstrating significant growth of marked SOMATOM Sensation 64-slice configuration Scan area Thorax-Abdomen Pitch 1.2 Scan length 686 mm Reconstruction increment 0.8 mm B4If Scan time 15 s Kernel Scan direction cranio-caudal Contrast kV 120 kV Volume 100 ml Effective mAs 150 mAs Flow rate 3 ml / s Rotation time 0.5 s Postprocessing Slice collimation 0.6 mm syngo CT Oncology Spatial resolution 0.33 mm Slice width 1 mm lesions (Fig. 3). A great time saver is the ability to switch between lung and soft tissue windows, for example, which means that lung nodules (Figs. 1 and 2) can be easily evaluated at the same time, without loading a new data set. All lesion parameters are included in the same report. DIAGNOSIS AND COMMENTS Preliminary experiences with syngo CT Oncology** suggest a great potential for improving all aspects of routine workflow by allowing us to deliver objective, reliable and consistent tumor evaluation and follow-up measurements which are less prone to inter- and intra-reader variability, allowing us to deliver a more standardized output. Additionally, the automated lesion matching could help to save valuable time in follow-up exams. 1 Graser, A. and Becker, C. R. (2005) SOMATOM Sessions 17. 2 Das, M. et al (2006) SOMATOM Sessions 19. 3 Mang, T. et al (2007) Eur Radiol Mar 10. * syngo CT Oncology will be available with the release of syngo 2008A. ** Pending 510(k): The information about this product is being provided for planning purposes only. This product is pending 510(k) review, and is not yet commercially available in the U.S. 2 2 Automated lesion matching identified the previously identified lesions in the follow-up exam. The percental change in basic tumor parameters were automatically calcu-lated and presented in the report. 39 Clinical Outcomes Neurology Case 5 Utilizing the SOMATOM Emotion 16-slice configuration for a Neuro DSA CTA Evaluation of a Suspected PICA Aneurysm By Adam J. Davis, MD, Hartsdale Imaging, Hartsdale, New York, USA HISTORY DIAGNOSIS AND COMMENTS The patient, a 13-year-old female presented in our Imaging Center with acute onset persistent left hemicranial and left supraorbital headache. Neurologic examination was unremarkable. A non-gadolinium 3D TOF MRA of the brain was performed to evaluate for the possibility of a vascular abnormality. The exam was suspicious for a left posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) saccular aneurysm. CTA of the brain was requested for a further evaluation. A left posterior inferior cerebellar artery loop was diagnosed and no aneurysm demonstrated. MRA is an excellent screening technique for the presence of intracranial aneurysms, although the inherent resolution and presence of flow artifacts may make the technique insufficient for smaller and more tortuous intracranial vessels. The MRA imaging is suspicious, but not definitive, for a proximal left PICA aneurysm. An elongated 2.9 mm posterior projecting outpouching could not be clearly delineated from the parent vessel. The Neuro DSA CTA of the brain clearly defined the anatomy of the vessel, demonstrating a tight, posteriorly oriented C-shaped loop, 1 EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Scanner L R corresponding to the area of suspicion on the MRA. The fully automated CT DSA application easily allowed VRT visualization of the origin of the PICA from the lateral aspect of the vertebral artery, normally obscured by the adjacent occipital bone. Of interest, differing algorithms provide a different visualization of the anatomy. The use of a higher kernel algorithm for the pre- and post-masks allows for a more definitive evaluation of the luminal contour, although the image quality may be less pleasing to the eye. It should be remembered that the luminal diameter of this PICA measures approximately 0.6 mm; emphasizing the excellent inherent resolution of Neuro DSA CTA performed with the SOMATOM® Emotion 16-slice configuration. SOMATOM Emotion 16-slice configuration Scan area Head Slice collimation 0.6 mm Scan length 138 mm Slice width 0.75 mm Scan time 10 s Pitch 0.9 Scan direction Caudo Cranial Reconstruction increment 0.5mm kV 130 kV Kernel H20 / H70 Effective mAs 176 mAs Postprocessing Rotation time 0.6 s syngo Neuro DSA 1 PA view of the non-gadolinium 3D TOF MRA demonstrates the abnormality at the origin of the left PICA (arrow). 40 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Neurology Clinical Outcomes 2 3 , 2 A more magnified MRA image utilizing clip planes isolates the left PICA. The best view orientation gives a hint as to the true nature of the finding, although the vessel course and origin are not clearly defined on the MRA, and the outpouching cannot be entirely eliminated in any view. The study remains non-diagnostic. 4 3 CTA utilizing a closely applied clip plane from the left side eliminates much of the obscuring occipital calvarium, and allows improved visualization of the lateral aspect of the vessel. While still somewhat obscured, this view demonstrates the origin of the PICA and a tight posterior C-shaped loop, not an aneurysm (H20 S Kernel setting). 5 4 Neuro DSA CTA provides a rapid and easy to acquire visualization of the lateral aspect of the left PICA. A clip plane in the orientation of the view was the only additional post processing required once the VRT was created. The vessel loop is clearly defined, and the possibility of a saccular aneurysm is definitively excluded (arrow). 5 Neuro DSA CTA utilizing a higher kernel algorithm (H70s) provides substantially better visualization of the origin of the left PICA. A well defined proximal segment is now seen prior to the tight posterior C-shaped loop (arrow). The contralateral right PICA is also clearly defined (arrowhead). SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 41 Clinical Outcomes Acute Care Case 6 Dual Source CT Triple Rule Out Without Beta-Blocker By Christoph R. Becker, MD, Section Chief, Computed Tomography Department of Clinical Radiology, University Hospital of Munich-Grosshadern, Munich, Germany HISTORY A 60-year-old male patient, suffering from a severe chest pain, arrived in the Department of Radiology of the University Hospital in Munich, Großhadern. In order to rule out the major causes of chest pain (such as myocardial infarction, pulmonary embolism, and aortic dissection) in a one stop diagnosis, the patient was transferred directly to the CT department. A gated scan of chest was performed on the SOMATOM® Definition, without the use of beta-blockers. the major causes of chest pain in a onestop diagnosis without the compromise of beta-blockers. Now we can accurately triage chest-pain patients within 10 minutes after presenting to our department. With the SOMATOM Definition, a special Chest Pain protocol can be used, applying reduced dose to the patient through the combination of two scan ranges, a cardio scan and a thorax scan. The dose modulation along the patient axis is performed with an optimized dose for each of the corresponding regions. In combination with a simple contrast injection protocol of 80 ml with a flow rate of 4,5 ml/s, Dual Source CT enabled us to establish the chest pain evaluation into our daily routine. EXAMINATION PROTOCOL DIAGNOSIS The gated chest pain protocol of the SOMATOM Definition enabled the immediate visualization of the entire thorax as well as the coronary arteries without motion artifacts. As shown in the images below, a Stanford type B aortic dissection was identified. The patient was referred to Vascular Surgery Department for stent placement. COMMENTS Chest pain is one of the most common and complex symptoms for which patients seek medical care. With standard diagnostic evaluation, patients with chest pain undergo multiple serial tests and long observation periods. This ties up staff as well as space for up to a whole day. Dual Source CT enables us to quickly rule out Scanner SOMATOM Definition Scan area Chest Scan length 285 mm Scan time 16 sec Scan direction Cranio-caudal Heart rate 65–70 bpm kV 120 kV mAs/Rot 320 mAs/Rot Rotation time 0.33 sec Temporal resolution HR independent 83 msec Slice collimation 0.6 mm Spatial resolution 0.33 mm Slice width 0.6 mm Pitch 0.30 Reconstruction increment 0.75 Effective dose 9,2 mSv Kernel B26 Volume 80 ml Flow rate 4,5 ml/s Start delay CareBolus+5s 42 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Acute Care Clinical Outcomes 1 3 2 1 Motion free visualization of coronary arteries rule out myocardial infarction. 2 Due to excellent imaging of patient’s aorta, Stanford type B aortic dissection can be precisely shown. 3 Accurate display of pulmonary arteries rule out pulmonary embolism. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 43 Clinical Outcomes Acute Care Case 7 SOMATOM Definition: New Insight Into Kidney Stone Detection and Characterization With Spiral Dual Energy By Anno Graser, MD, Thorsten Johnson, MD, and Christoph R. Becker, MD, Department of Clinical Radiology, University Hospital of Munich-Grosshadern, Munich, Germany HISTORY DIAGNOSIS A 34-year-old male (Fig. 1A) and a 55year-old male with latent gout (Fig. 1B) separately visited our Acute Care unit with flank pain. They had been presented after multiple occurrence of nephrolithiasis and urolithiasis. Both patients were referred to our Dual Source CT for evaluation of abdominal stones. Contrast enhanced CTA scans of the abdomen were performed on the SOMATOM® Definition using spiral dual energy. The dual energy acquisition allowed precise localization of the kidney stones. In addition Patient B showed dilatation of the right ureter proximal to the calculus. Moreover, dual energy analysis permitted a characterization of the scanned tissue or material. The red colorcoding of the urethral stone shown in Patient A (Fig. 2A) indicates an uric acid stone. In contrast, the vertebrae can be identified as blue-colored structure. After Dual Energy CT, we could transfer the pa- 1A tient for drug therapy treatment. Subsequently, the stone passed spontaneously and was analysed. The analysis confirmed that the concrement consisted of 100% uric acid. The blue color-code shown in Patient B (Fig. 2B) characterizes a calcium oxalate stone. Based on this dual energy study, the stone was removed in an interventional procedure. The lab analysis of the removed stone confirmed the calcium oxalate composition. 1B 1 Using conventional MDCT imaging, urethral stones (arrows) can clearly be visualized in both patients (Fig. 1A and 1B). However, they cannot be characterized based on a conventional CT single source image. 44 Acute Care Clinical Outcomes EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Scanner SOMATOM Definition SOMATOM Definition Patient Patient A Patient B Scan area Abdominal Scan Abdominal Scan Scan length 377 mm 215 mm 25 sec Scan time 44 sec Scan direction Craniocaudal Craniocaudal kV 140 kV and 80 kV 140 kV and 80 kV Effective mAs 64 eff. mAs and 352 eff. mAs 69 eff. mAs and 351 eff. mAs Rotation time 0.5 sec 0.5 sec Slice collimation 0.6 mm 0.6 mm Spatial resolution 0.33 mm 0.33 mm Slice width 0.75 mm 0.75 mm Reconstructed slice thickness 2.0 mm 2.0 mm Increment 1.5 mm 1.5 mm CTDIvol 18.07 mGy 15.4 mGy Kernel D30 D30 CareDose4D on on COMMENTS The majority of kidney stones can be grouped as either calcium oxalate stones (80%) or uric acid material (9%). Conventional CT imaging helps to locate and visualize kidney stones. However, a fast and secure characterization is not possible. Dual energy scanning overcomes this limi- tation and enables us to differentiate the scanned tissue. The SOMATOM Definition permits the use of two sources at two different kV levels simultaneously. The result is two spiral data sets acquired in a single scan providing diverse information, making it possible to differentiate, character- 2A 2B 2A Patient A: Spiral dual energy enables the characterization of tissue. The kidney stone could be identified as uric acid stone, color-coded in red (arrow). 2B ize, isolate, and distinguish the imaged tissue and material as shown in Fig. 2A and 2B. In our case, dual energy scanning offers new insights into the characterization of urolitis. A corresponding treatment decision can be reached immediately, avoiding unnecessary hospitalization. Patient B: Spiral dual energy enables the characterization of tissue. The kidney stone could be identifies as calcium oxalate stone, color-coded in blue (arrow). 45 Science Dual Source CT Detecting Coronary Atherosclerosis by Dual Source Computed Tomography Images With Color Maps By Sei Komatsu1,2, Dieter Ropers1, Axel Küttner3, Ulrike Ropers1, Martin Wechsel1, Tobias Pflederer1, Alexander Kuhlmann1, Katharina Anders3, Werner Bautz3, Werner G. Daniel1, Atsushi Hirayama2, Kazuhisa Kodama2, Stephan Achenbach1 Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany Cardiovascular Division, Osaka Police Hospital, Osaka, Japan 3 Institute of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany 1 2 Color-coded Coronary Analysis Recently, Dual Source computed tomography (DSCT) has become available. Due to its high temporal resolution, coronary arteries can now be visualized with reduced motion artifacts. Spatial resolution of DSCT reaches 0.33 mm allowing more precise visualization of the coronary arteries. However, the grade of stenosis does not predict an acute coronary syndrome 1 due to positive remodeling (compensatory enlargement of lumen area 2). Multi-detector row CT (MDCT) coronary angiography allows noninvasive visualization not only of coronary stenosis but also of coronary atherosclerosis 3–5. Plaque composition such as lipid-rich plaque, fibrous plaque, and calcified plaque can be characterized based on the CT values 4,5. Region of interest (ROI) and profile curve are traditional methods to measure CT values. However, they do not cover the entire vessel at one time. We developed a 1A comprehensive method of analysis, Plaque Map, which converts DICOM-formatted files to color-coded images based on CT attenuation5. Vulnerable plaque of coronary 6,7 and peripheral arteries8 can be demonstrated by MDCT using Plaque Map as IVUS-like visualization tool. Fig. 1 demonstrates a typical example. Fig. 1A is a cross-sectional image of a vessel without plaque. Concentric graduation from red to yellow spreads outwards the vessel. Fig. 1B is a cross-sectional image of the culprit lesion in a patient with acute coronary syndrome. Yellow area (dotted arrow) 2 1C 1A 1A Cross-sectional image of vessel without plaque (Left). Plaque Map (Right). Concentric graduation from red to yellow spreads outside the vessel. 50 0 200 350* 100 White 0 68 136 273 341 409 *Maximum CT number of Contrast Media 1B (Quoted ref 7) The cross-sectional image of acute corona areas drawn green to blue (arrow) are ranged -25 to 25 HU, suggesting lipid-rich plaque. 1B 205 Lipid-rich Plaque (LP) Fibrous Plaque (FP) Calcified Plaque (CP) 1C (Quoted ref 7) Intravascular ultrasound image. Plaque Map corresponded to the findings of intravascular ultrasound (IVUS). 1C 500 350 300 250 200 150 70 –(HU) – 500 – 350 – 300 – 250 – 200 – 150 50 25 0 -25 -50 – 70 – 50 – 25 ~ 0 ~ -25 ~ -50 46 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 2 Color Map for detecting plaque characteristics. 3A 4A 4B 5A 5B b c d LP lipid pool 3B 4C 5C 5D FP LP branch CP LP+FP 3 Color Map of curved MPR of normal coronary artery (Fig. 3A). Crosssectional image of Fig. 3A arrow (Fig. 3B). 0–50 50–100 4 An example of non-calcified plaque. Fig. 4A: Curved MPR. Fig. 4B: Color-coded curved MPR. Fig. 4C: Color-coded cross-sectional image at Q1 (Fig. 4B dot). 100–200 200–500 0–50 50–100 represents residual lumen area which indicates a severe stenosis. Three areas with green to blue color (arrow) ranging from -25 to 25 HU, suggest lipid-rich plaque. The observation of predominantly lipid-rich plaque corresponds well to IVUS (Fig. 1C). Recently the syngo Circulation software package has been equipped with color-coded analysis based on CT attenuation 9 (syngo Circulation Plaque Analysis). We describe one application for detecting coronary plaque. Screening Coronary Plaque using syngo Circulation The integrated color coding allows the four colors, green, light green, orange, and pink. The ranges and thresholds can be individually changed. We set the borders of the scale to distinguish maximum six borders through coronary artery; transparent (below 0 HU), green (0–50 HU), light green (50–100 HU), orange (100 –200 HU), pink (200-“maximum CT number of contrast media on coronary artery”), and white (above “maximum CT number of contrast media”) (Fig. 2). The upper limit of pink area is the same as contrast media. Light green and orange correspond to fibrous plaque. Green shows lipid-rich plaque. Lipid-pools are suspected of areas with a density below 0 HU inside the vessel area. CT density of calcification is above the maximum CT number of contrast media, appearing white. 100–200 200–500 5 An example of various plaque types. Color Map of curved MPR (Fig. 5A). The points b, c and d in Fig. 5A are shown as Fig. 5B, Fig. 5C, and Fig. 5D, respectively. LP: lipid-rich plaque, FP: fibrous plaque, CP: calcified plaque. 0 –50 50 –100 100–200 200–350 Interpretation of Coronary Plaque with Color Analysis Futures of Color Analysis using DSCT A typical vessel without plaque is demonstrated in Fig. 3A. Areas of orange, light green and green are demonstrated as concentric circles (Fig. 3B). A typical example of lipid-rich plaque is shown in Fig. 4. The curved MPR of left anterior descending coronary artery shows a noncalcified plaque with positive remodelling in the proximal segment of the coronary artery (Fig. 4A). Fig. 4B and 4C, respectively, demonstrate color maps of the curved MPR and cross-sectional image at the level of the atherosclerotic lesion. Green, which ranges from 0 to 50 HU, and light-green, which ranges from 50 to 100 HU, are dominant. This suggests that the plaque consists of predominantly lipid-rich components. We also show another example of various plaque types. The left anterior descending artery of an asymptomatic patient was analyzed (Fig. 5). Cross-sectional images at the points b, c and d in Fig. 5A are shown as Fig. 5B, Fig. 5C, and Fig. 5D, respectively. In Fig. 5B, lipid-rich plaque as light green is present at 3–6 o‘clock position of the vessel. In the vessel, area less than 0 HU (transparent) is found at 5–6 o’clock, suggesting a lipid-pool. Fig. 5C demonstrates calcified plaque in white. Fig. 5D shows mixed plaque in light green and green, suggesting a mixture of fibrous and lipid-rich plaque. Previously, analysis of CT attenuation within coronary atherosclerotic plaques was limited by the relatively poor spatial resolution of CT. CT attenuation was used for “organ-level” analysis. The improvement of spatial and temporal resolution of DSCT minimizes partial volume effects and “Pixel analysis in silico”7 becomes possible. The term “in silico”, referring to is commonly used in the fields of life science and computer medicine. In the era of DSCT, we can analyze plaque at “tissuelevel” using a workstation with color coding software such as syngo Circulation. References 1 Ambrose JA et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 1988: 12(1): 56–62. 2 Glagov S et al. N Engl J Med. 1987: 316(22): 1371–5. 3 Schroeder S et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2001: 37(5): 1430–5. 4 Achenbach S et al. Circulation. 2004: 109(1): 14–7. 5 Komatsu S et al. Circ J 2005: 69(1): 72–7. 6 Komatsu S et al. Int J Cardiol 2007: 117(3): 423-9. 7 Komatsu S et al. Vascular Disease Prevention 2006: 3(4): 319–325. 8 Komatsu S et al. Int J Cardiol 2007: 117(3):423-9. 9 syngo Circulation: The Next generation. SOMATOM Session 18. 8–9, 2006. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 47 Science Coronary CT Angiography With DSCT Implications for Contrast Media Delivery By Joachim Ernst Wildberger, MD1, Andreas Horst Mahnken, MD, MBA1, and Peter Reinhardt Seidensticker, MD2 Department of Diagnostic Radiology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany 2 Global Medical Affairs Diagnostic Imaging, Bayer Schering Pharma AG, Berlin, Germany 1 Implications for Contrast Media Delivery Multi-detector row computed tomography (MDCT) has substantially improved over the past years with faster gantry rotation, more powerful X-ray tubes, dedicated interpolation algorithms and – last but not least – the introduction of Dual Source CT (DSCT) with the SOMATOM Definition (Siemens Medical Solutions, Forchheim, Germany) in 2006. As one of the consequences of this technical evolution, CT angiography (CTA) of the coronaries has become an established technique for minimally invasive imaging and has already replaced a significant number of diagnostic catheter angiographies. Fundamental advantages of the new DSCT scanners are provided by three cornerstones, i.e., improved spatial resolution, better temporal resolution and shorter scan time. With DSCT, imaging of the coronaries can easily be performed in a single breathhold providing sub-millimeter isotropic resolution and minimized motion artifacts. High quality assessment of the coronary vessels highly irrespective of the underlying heart rate of the patient is an evolutionary milestone that significantly improves the clinical robustness of cardiac CT. Contrast Media Administration In general, optimized contrast injection is an important issue for achieving high quality CT scans with homogeneous attenuation and high contrast throughout the entire data set. In particular CT angiography, including cardiac CT, will benefit from homogeneous and compact bolus geometry1. High and constant iodine contrast should be maintained throughout the whole data set to achieve diagnostic opacification by providing optimal contrast between the vessel lumen and the surrounding soft tissue. EXAMINATION PROTOCOL Scanner SOMATOM Definition Collimation 2 x 64 [2 x 32] x 0.6 mm Pitch Dependent on patient’s heart rate (0.2 – 0.43) kVp 120 mAsrot 400* Rotation time 330 ms Slice thicknesseff 0.75 mm Increment 0.4 mm Kernel Siemens B26f (HeartView smooth ASA) Contrast media injection protocol IDR (Iodine Delivery Rate) biphasic (5 s @ 2 gJ/s + (x-5) s @ 1.5 gJ/s)** (e.g. Iopromide 370: 27 ml @ 5.4 ml/s + y ml @ 4 ml/s Iopromide 300: 33 ml @ 6.6 ml/s + y ml @ 5 ml/s) Amount Individually adapted: Injection duration = Scan duration + 10% Saline chaser 50 ml @ 4 ml/s (370) and 5 ml/s (300), respectively Bolus timing Bolus-Trigger in the ascending aorta; Threshold: 180 HU Scan parameters, reconstruction parameters and contrast injection parameters for a suggested cardiac scan protocol with the SOMATOM Definition (Siemens). * In addition, a dose modulation concept is recommended (e.g. Care Dose 4D; ECG-pulsing). ** x = (Scan duration + 10%); Clinical example: Contrast material will be injected with 2g iodine/s , followed by a 6s injection at 1.5g iodine/s, if the scan lasts 10s. The latter can be calculated from the overall injection duration; e.g. overall scan duration +10% = 11s, minus 5s for the first (fixed) injection phase. Therefore, using iopromide 300, 33 mL will be injected with 6.6 mL/s followed by 30 mL iopromide 300 with 5 mL/s. 48 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Science 1A 1B 1 Male patient with intermittent atypical chest pain and an increased cardio-vascular risk profile. He has a history of smoking (30 pack years) and moderate hyperlipidaemia. Contrast-enhanced DSCT of the coronary arteries was performed to rule out coronary artery disease. Fig. 1A: 3D-VRT (Volume Rendering Technique) shows the left coronary artery without pathological findings. Fig. 1B: Curved multiplanar reformat (MPR) of the right coronary artery shows an eccentric, non-calcified plaque without relevant lumen narrowing (arrows). SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 49 Science 2A 2B 2 74-year-old male patient with a history of coronary bypass surgery: He presented with acute chest pain and suspected bypass graft occlusion. Contrast-enhanced cardiac DSCT revealed two patent CABG (coronary artery bypass grafts) to the LCX (left circumflex artery) and the LAD (left anterior descending artery) (Fig. 2A). Distal anastomoses were patent (arrows), as exemplarily shown for the LAD (Fig. 2B). 50 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Science Sophisticated injection protocols such as biphasic injection protocols have been advocated for coronary CT applications and have been incorporated into the clinical workflow. However, many complex multiphasic contrast delivery protocols for ideal enhancement patterns are still based on extensive mathematical equations and have not yet undergone sufficient clinical evaluation.2 Numerous factors affect the geometry of the contrast medium bolus in CTA.3 These factors may be divided into intrinsic patient related factors and extrinsic contrast material and injection technique associated parameters, and include: ■ Patient cardiac output, individual pathology, specific parameters (e.g. body mass index, blood pressure, heart rate and even gender) ■ Specific pharmacologic features of the contrast material itself (e.g. concentration, viscosity and temperature of the contrast medium injected) ■ Injection technique (dual-head power injector; flow rate, total volume, mono-, bi-, or multiphasic; use of saline chaser). Iodine Delivery Rate (IDR) The overall iodine load is the main determinant for parenchymal organ studies. However, the overall amount of contrast material administered to the patient is of minor importance for a CTA study. The iodine delivery rate (IDR; given in g iodine/s) is the determining factor for the quality of the bolus and can easily be calculated by multiplying the iodine concentration of the contrast material (g iodine/ml) with the flow rate of the injector (ml/s). Usually the IDR will be in the range of 1.5 – 2.0 g iodine/s for CTA applications. This can be realized by using a highly concentrated contrast medium (350 – 400 mg iodine) in combination with moderate flow rates. On the other hand, the same IDR can also be achieved by increasing the flow rates for contrast material with 300 mg of iodine per ml (or even less). Normalizing the IDR is a straightforward means of making different injection protocols comparable. It seems obvious that the choice of a highly concentrated agent could keep the flow rates lower and potentially could help to avoid local complications such as paravasation. However, in this context it should be kept in mind that the relation between the iodine concentration of a contrast me- dium and its viscosity is exponential. This means that the pressures that are built up by the power injector and the resulting pressures in the patient‘s veins might be even higher with highly concentrated agents despite the fact that they are injected with slower flow rates. The clinical effect of different flow rates and contrast medium viscosities on the incidence of paravasation is not fully understood and will require large prospective population studies. However, the benefit of large access lines (e.g., 18G needles) and of preheating the contrast material to mean body temperature of 37° Celsius in order to bring down the viscosity appears obvious. Scan Timing In any case, using empiric scan delays cannot be recommended with modern MDCT or DSCT. With 16- (or more) slice MDCT, the start delay of a CTA has to be chosen individually. In the clinical setting, two modes are currently available for optimal enhancement after intravenous contrast delivery1,4: Automated bolus tracking provides a sufficiently robust, easy to use method. A pre-monitoring scan is performed at the upper level of the heart using a low-dose scanning technique (120 kVp; 20 mAs (effective)). A region-of-interest is placed in the ascending aorta and attenuation values (in Hounsfield units; HU) are continuously measured during the contrast injection. When the trigger threshold level (e.g. 140 HU) is reached, an automated start of the spiral scan is initialized. Alternatively, a test-bolus methodology can be applied. A small additional volume of contrast material (usually 15 ml – 20 ml) is injected at the same flow rates as used for the contrast enhanced scan protocol. By repeat acquisition of serial scans (monitoring scans every 2 s from approximately 10 s – 40 s; usually at the level of the heart), individual flow dynamics can be assessed more precisely: From the enhancement over time within the target vessel lumen, the time-to-peak enhancement can be calculated. The latter is chosen as start delay. The test-bolus data also allows estimation of the bolus geo-metry with a given amount of contrast material at a selected flow rate. Moreover, this technique allows determination of cardiac output from the contrast enhancement curve and therefore constitutes a more in- dividualized approach to the injection regimen as compared to automated bolus tracking.5 Saline Chaser The use of double-power injectors has been advocated for automated saline flushing at the injection site, especially for CTA examinations. Otherwise, approximately 20 ml – 30 ml of contrast material will be retained in the “dead space” between the brachial vein and the superior vena cava. In consequence, performing saline flush improves arterial enhancement and reduces the amount of contrast needed for a diagnostic examination. This has a positive impact on patient safety and costs.6 In summary, optimal contrast bolus shaping with special emphasis on bolus design and timing is a key issue in modern DSCT imaging of the coronary arteries. The IDR is the most important factor for achieving this goal and can be optimized by adapting the flow rate of the injector to the iodine concentration of the chosen contrast medium. Typical IDRs lie between 1.5 g l/s and 2.0 g I/s. The test-bolus methodology and automated bolus tracking are widely used as an adjunct to the regular CTA scan and help to increase the robustness of this examination method. 1 Cademartiri F., van der Lugt A, Luccichenti G, Pavone P, Krestin GP. Parameters affecting bolus geometry in CTA: A review. J Comput Assist Tomogr 2002; 26: 598 – 607. 2 Bae KT. Peak contrast enhancement in CT and MR angiography: When does it occur and why? Pharmacokinetic study in a porcine model. Radiology 2003; 227: 809 – 816 3 Fleischmann D. High-concentration contrast media in MDCT angiography: Principles and rationale. Eur Radiol 2003; 13 Suppl 3: N39 – N43 4 Bae KT. Test-bolus versus bolus-tracking techniques for CT angiographic timing. Radiology 2005; 236: 369 – 370. 5 Mahnken AH, Klotz E, Hennemuth A, Jung B, Koos R, Wildberger JE, Günther RW. Measurement of cardiac output from a test-bolus injection in multislice computed tomography. Eur Radiol 2003; 13: 2498 – 2504. 6 Schoellnast H, Tillich M, Deutschmann HA, Deutschmann MJ, Fritz GA, Stessel U, Schaffler GJ, Uggowitzer MM. Abdominal multidetector row computed tomography. Reduction of cost and contrast material dose using saline flush. J Comp Assist Tomogr 2003; 27: 847 – 853. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 51 Science Nefertiti’s Bust – An Inside View For decades, Nefertiti’s beauty has captivated museum visitors. But what is behind the perfect surface? Modern CT technology increasingly becomes interesting for historical, non-destructive investigations. So plaster layers and the limestone core of the world-famous bust can now easily be virtually separated and evaluated. By Andreas Blaha and Monika Demuth, PhD, Siemens Medical Solutions, Computed Tomography, Forchheim, Germany The name of the Egyptian queen means exactly what the bust shows: “the beautiful one has arrived.” And she has arrived – or much better said, under extreme safety precautions has been brought – in the true sense of the word, to the Imaging Science Institute (ISI) at Siemens Medical Solutions in Berlin in order to be scanned by the SOMATOM® Sensation 64-slice computed tomography (CT) scanner. The examination was part of a research for documentation by the broadcaster, National Geographic, in cooperation with Prof. Dietrich Wildung, Director of the Egyptian Museum in Berlin. Thanks to modern CT technology, the researchers could make many inner details visible. Because CT technology has realized such tremendous advances since 1992 (when the bust was last scanned) the researchers expected a much more detailed separation of the limestone core and plaster surface of the bust revealing much more detail due to the improved image quality with 0,24 mm isotropic resolution of the SOMATOM Sensation 64. The state of the art volume rendering technique which was used created 1660 thin axial cuts of the bust. This enormous number of slices have been put together to display a 3 dimensional object. This method is typically used to view objects from all viewing angles to get a 3D impression of the object. By adjusting the Houndsfield scale according to the scanned material it is possible to show and hide the plaster layer over the limestone and vice versa. In addition it is possible to assign certain Houndsfield values to colors for easy differentiation between the displayed layers. Therefor with help of CT software, it was possible to virtually “remove” the plaster layer and 1 1 CT-image from a SOMATOM Sensation 64 showing the pristine surface of the bust of Nefretete (without painting). 52 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Science then, step by step, dissect the limestone core. The procedure revealed, in amazingly fine resolution, the rough limestone core showing slanting, asymmetric shoulders and a thin throat (Figs. 2 and 3). Discovering and establishing the practice of non-damaging examinations of Egyptian antiques has been described by Dietrich Wildung in 1992.1 He conducted research according to the then-modern archeological standards. Quite an unusual idea at the time: spectacular findings were then seldom thoroughly investigated by fine arts experts to the different composition of the materials. The research with CT scans firmly established that the composition consisted of a sculptured limestone core layered with plaster. Plaster was used here and in other details to modify the sculpture to the familiar form known today. Nofretete’s bust was discovered in 1912 at the Egyptian desert village of Tell el-Amarna. Thanks to this world famous work by the sculptor Thutmosis, the queen enjoys worldwide recognition, not only by art experts, but also by the general public. As wife of Pharaoh Echnaton, she and her 2 husband, in their function as priests, represented the important God, Aton. During their rule, the royal couple often allowed various portrayals of themselves with their children. Results and interpretations about the CTscan of Nefertitis bust will soon appear in appropriate scientific publications. Reference: Dietrich Wildung, “Einblicke – Zerstörungsfreie Untersuchungen an altägyptischen Objekten“, 1992, p 133–156. 1 3 2 This image shows the plaster layer over the shoulder area of the limestone sculpture of the queen. 3 The limestone core of the bust, without plaster covering. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 53 Science CT Coronary Angiography Half-Scan vs. Multi-Segment Reconstruction for Computed Tomography Coronary Angiography Considerations on the effects on image quality By Stephan Achenbach, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany Coronary artery visualization by multidetector row (or better, multi-slice) computed tomography (“coronary CT angiography,“ “coronary CTA”) is rapidly entering mainstream cardiology. High accuracies have been reported for the detection of coronary artery stenoses by 16- and 64-slice CT and especially a high negative predictive value makes coronary CTA a useful tool in the assessment of certain patient populations with chest pain 1. In a joint statement by several professional societies, led by the American College of Cardiology, the use of CT coronary angiography has been labeled an “appropriate” indication to rule out or establish the presence of coronary artery stenoses in several clinical situations 2. Cardiac Motion Rapid motion of the heart and coronary arteries and ensuing impairment of image quality are the major problems that may exist in CT coronary angiography. Insufficient image quality can lead to falsepositive or false-negative findings, with the consequence of unnecessary further testing in the first case and of missed diagnoses in the latter. In order to avoid artifacts caused by motion, two aspects are important. Firstly, with widely used single source computed tomography systems it is important to use data for image reconstruction that was acquired during a cardiac phase of relatively little motion of the coronary arteries. Secondly, it is essential to limit data used for image reconstruction to as short a Reconstruction algorithms that use data from one continuous 180° sweep of the x-ray tube for image reconstruction are called “half-scan” reconstruction algorithms. Thus, the temporal resolution of these half-scan reconstruction algorithms corresponds to approximately one-half of the gantry rotation time (e.g. 330 ms gantry rotation time = 165 ms temporal resolution). All x-ray data used for reconstruction of a single cross-sectional image are acquired contiguously during the image acquisition window in one single heart beat. struct one single image. Theoretically, the window of data used for image reconstruction in each cardiac cycle can be substantially shorter than in half-scan reconstruction algorithms. However, multi-segment reconstruction algorithms use data from several heart beats to reconstruct one image so that the generated image is an “average” of several cardiac cycles. Since slight differences from one heart beat to the next can be assumed even in regular heart rhythms, and since substantial differences between consecutive heart beats must be assumed in situations e.g. of arrhythmia, the averaging of several cardiac cycles has severe drawbacks from a theoretical point of view (Fig. 1). A definite benefit of multi-segment reconstruction over half-scan reconstruction has not been proven for the detection of coronary artery stenosis. However, regarding the use of multi-segment reconstruction for coronary artery visualization, potential issues of concern exist. They will be outlined below. Multi-Segment Reconstruction (Multi-Phase Reconstruction) 1. Variability of the Cardiac Cycle Alternative approaches are so-called “multi-segment” reconstruction algorithms. These algorithms use less than 180° of data from a single heart beat. To compensate for the missing projections, data acquired in the next cardiac cycles is used to fill in the missing projections. This is done under the assumption that one cardiac cycle is absolutely equal to the next and data from several heart beats can thus be combined to recon- Coronary artery visualization and analysis requires sub-millimeter resolution. However, from one cardiac cycle to the next, it cannot be expected that the coronary arteries return to exactly the same position, within a fraction of a millimeter. Thus, multi-segment reconstruction, which uses averaging, may slightly blur the images and thus reduce image quality. segment of the coronary cycle as possible. In order to reconstruct one cross-sectional image, data acquired from 180° of parallel data projections are necessary. Most computed tomography systems contain one x-ray tube, so that one-half rotation of the gantry is necessary to acquire data from 180°. Half-Scan Reconstruction 54 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Science 1A 1B 1C 1D 1 Fig. 1A to Fig. 1C: Angiography image of a right coronary artery (RCA) and colored outline in three subsequent heartbeats, projected on top of each other (Fig. 1D), clearly showing that variations of the position of coronary arteries in each subsequent 1E 1F 1G 1H 1 Fig. E to Fig. G: Cross-section of a coronary artery including a calcified plaque with multisegment reconstruction in three fused projections. Small dimensioned outlines can not be clearly depicted and information is lost in the process (Fig. 1H). SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 55 Science 2. Changes in Heart Rate During the Scan Variability in the position of the coronary arteries from one cardiac cycle to the next will be especially evident if heart rate changes during the scan. Slight changes in heart rate during image acquisition are frequent. In slightly longer cardiac cycles, 2A the diagnostic filling period is longer and the heart will be more “expanded“ than with faster heart rates. Thus, the end-diastolic position of the coronary arteries may change and images reconstructed with multi-segment algorithms will be an aver2B age of several, non-identical cardiac cycles. With higher true temporal resolution of CT scanners using half-scan (or singlesegment) reconstruction, heart rate variations are not a limitation and motionfree imaging becomes possible (Fig 2). 2C 2 Example of a patient in whom the rate of normal sinus rhythm changes during the scan. It drops from 75/min to 63/min during the initial phase of data acquisition (Fig. 2A). Such changes in heart rate will lead to differences in the position of the coronary arteries from one cardiac cycle to the next – a disadvantage for multisegment reconstruction. With half-scan reconstruction and a temporal resolution of 83 ms (SOMATOM Definition, Siemens AG), clear and motion-free visualization of the heart (right coronary artery) is achieved in spite of the heart rate variation (Figs. 2B and 2C). 3. Arrhythmias During Data Acquisition Not only can the heart rate change during data acquisition (even if there is sinus rhythm throughout), it also is possible – and, in fact, not infrequent – that 3A arrhythmias occur in the form of supraventricular or ventricular ectopic beats. Image quality of the single reconstructed image remains unaffected in the case of 3B 3 78-year-old patient with previous bypass surgery. Substantial supraventricular arrhythmia occurred during the scan (Fig. 3A). Half-scan reconstruction with a temporal resolution of 83 ms remains unaffected from the arrhythmia and allows precise delineation of bypass grafts and a stenosis in the venous graft to the left anterior descending coronary artery (Fig. 3B, arrow). Angiography confirms the finding (Fig. 3C, arrow). 56 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine half-scan reconstruction because it is not necessary to average data from several heart beats (Fig. 3). 3C Science 4. Reduced Pitch for Multi-Segment Reconstruction In order to be able to use data from several cardiac cycles to reconstruct a cross-sectional image at any given z-axis position, the x-ray detector has to cover that position during several consecutive cardiac cycles. The more cardiac cycles are to be used for reconstruction, the slower the movement of the patient relative to the detector has to be. Thus, the pitch which is defined as the table movement during a 360° rotation divided by the collimated detector width has to be chosen low and in each given z-axis position, the patient will be exposed to radiation several consecutive times. This leads to increased radiation exposure compared to single-segment reconstruction approaches. In addition, since the overall scan time will be longer, more contrast agent must be given to the patient to ensure full enhancement of the blood pool during the longer period of data acquisition. A further effect of this issue is that exclusion of ectopic beats from the reconstruction process may not be possible. Occasionally, ectopic beats will require excluding one or several heart beats from reconstruction in order to avoid misalignment artifacts. However, in that case, it may occur that the z-axis position inquestion will not be covered by the detector in enough “regular” heart beats to allow multi-segment reconstruction (Fig 4). 4A 4B 4C 4D 4E 4F 5. Examples Multi-segment reconstruction may theoretically lead to shorter data windows used for image reconstruction (compensated for by using data from several consecutive cardiac cycles), but it does not in all cases lead to elimination of motion artifact or improved image quality. In fact, Magnetic Resonance coronary angiography uses extensive averaging of heart beats in their data acquisition and reconstruction process, but even though the theoretical resolution of magnetic resonance coronary artery imaging is below 0.5 mm, images never reach the crispness and sharpness seen in cardiac CT. This is the consequence of blurring which is caused by the averaging of usually eight to 16 cardiac cycles. 4 Exclusion of an ectopic beat to avoid artifact in 64-slice CT. In the ECG trace, gray bars indicate the times during which data is used for image reconstruction (Fig. 4A). Because of the ectopic beat, one of these data windows is in systole (arrow). This leads to artifacts which can be seen in the CT images at the level of the mid to distal right coronary artery (arrows, Figs. 4A and 4C). After exclusion of the data acquired during the ectopic beat from image reconstruction in Fig. 4D (marked in blue), the right coronary artery is sharply delineated (arrows, Figs. 4E and 4F). SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 57 Science 5A 5A 57-year-old female. Heart rate 68/min. Half-scan reconstruction yields good image quality of the right coronary artery. Multi-segment reconstruction at the same cardiac phase (40 % of cardiac cycle) shows obvious motion artifact of the right coronary artery (right, arrow). 5B 73-year-old male. Heart rate 72/min. Half-scan reconstruction (left) yields good image quality of the right coronary artery. Multi-segment reconstruction at the same cardiac phase (70 % of cardiac cycle) shows obvious motion artifact of the right coronary artery (right, arrow). 5B In coronary CT angiography, multi-segment reconstruction does not reliably lead to elimination of motion artifacts. In fact, new artifacts may be introduced. Two examples are shown here (Fig. 5). Summary Even though multi-segment reconstruction, as compared to half-scan reconstruction, offers nominally shorter data windows during each cardiac cycle used for image reconstruction, the fact that data from several cardiac cycles need to be combined to make up for the missing projections constitutes a drawback that may have negative influence on image quality. “Blurring” may occur because the coronary arteries do not return to exactly the same position from one cardiac cycle to the next. The reduced pitch may cause higher radiation dose and may require a larger amount of contrast agent. Irregularities of the heart rate and arrhythmias may be more difficult to compensate for than with half-scan reconstruction. Finally, the initial experience with Dual Source CT demonstrates that high, true-temporal 58 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine resolution in combination with half-scan reconstruction allows reliable imaging of the coronary arteries even with high heart rates. References 1 Budoff MJ, Achenbach S, Blumenthal RS, et al.; Circulation 2006; 114(16): 1761–91. 2 Hendel RC, Patel MR, Kramer CM, et al.; J. Am. Coll. Cardiol. 2006; 48(7): 1475– 97. Education & Events CT Life Card: Clinical Education at Your CT Workplace There is an easy way to increase your skills at the CT workplace: exclusively for the SOMATOM® Definition, Siemens Medical Solutions introduces the CT Life Card, a portal for a wide spectrum of information and services at your scanner. The CT Life Card combines the Operator Manual, LifeNet and the new Workflow Assistant on one modern education and communication platform. The Workflow Assistant is a state-of-the-art CT examination guide that takes you from patient preparation, through scan acquisition to data evaluation. It expands your clinical knowledge by offering best practice examples including clinical background, current indications and fascinating case-studies. It provides useful workflow tips that enhance the confidence of the unexperienced user when performing advanced CT procedures such as cardiovascular imaging. It illustrates the quickest path to excellent clinical results using workflow movies that demonstrate the clinical utility of CT appli- CT Life Card – a portal to a wide spectrum of information and services at your workplace. cation tools such as syngo® Circulation and others. The Workflow Assistant is also available on DVD as a convenient tool for general staff education. In addition, via the LifeNet portal on the Life Card, you will find current information on CT education and gain access to helpful services such as ordering of trial licenses for the latest clinical applications. A workflow guide for cardiac imaging – how to perform left ventricular functional evaluation with syngo Circulation. * The DVD will be provided to all customers working with the software version syngo CT 2007C. For additional copies, please contact your local Siemens representatives E-Logbook: Eliminate Cumbersome Paperwork The E-Logbook* is a very handy tool that automatically records necessary data to be saved. You only have to enter specific additional information when needed. In many clinics, it is still common use to note patient examination data in a socalled “paper logbook.” With the newly developed E-Logbook you save time and will be guaranteed an error-free reporting compared to the conventional, handwritten patient logbook. The E-logbook input fields are individually configurable to include what really matters in the department. Parameters that are already available within the system (e.g. patient name, Patient ID, dose values) will be transferred to the E-Logbook automatically after completing the examination. Other parameters can then be typed in manually if desired. All recorded examination data are saved to a local database. Searching for a certain patient examination on a certain date is now only a matter of a few clicks. Additionally, the files can be transferred to any PC, e.g. for statistical evaluations in Microsoft Excel. A print-out of the data is possible directly from the scanner. “With the E-Logbook, we can quickly check what examinations we have done over the whole lifetime of our SOMATOM CT system. The system records all parameters automatically, which saves us time compared to a paper logbook”, says Michaela Henkel, technician of the Radiological Institute at the Werner-Wicker Klinik, Bad Wildungen, Germany. * The E-Logbook option is now available for all SOMATOM Sensation, Emotion and Spirit scanners with the syngo CT 2007 software. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 59 Education & Events New: Cardiac CT Poster for all Siemens Customers Siemens Medical Solutions announces a new Cardiac CT Anatomy poster. A special offer to all our customers: This high-gloss poster shows detailed CT images of main cardiac structures including all coronary vessels, cardiac valves, standard Myocardial Segmentation (AHA 17-Segment Model), different cardiac planes and standard views compared to conventional Angio (size: 84 cm x 119 cm; 33,11 x 46,81 inches). The images were provided by the University Hospital of Munich-Grosshadern (Department of Radiology and Cardiology) and the University Hospital of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany and were acquired with the SOMATOM Sensation 64 slice scanner and the SOMATOM Definition. Order your poster free of charge via this link: www.siemens.com/ ct-cardiac-poster New: CTA Interpretation Workshops The Friedrich-Alexander University Hospital and Siemens Medical Solutions offer clinical workshops specifically for image evaluation. Conducted by Stephan Achenbach, MD, FESC, FACC, from the Friedrich-Alexander University Hospital Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany, these courses focus on providing the participants with hands-on experience in the interpretation of coronary CT angiography data sets. For two days, participants have the opportunity to use image interpretation work- stations and evaluate 50 original coronary CT angiography scans, which leads towards Level II certification. These cases range from easy, introductory to more advanced cases with difficult diagnoses and typical pitfalls. Invasive coronary angiography correlation are available for every CT angiography case. Two participants work on one workstation jointly, and a faculty is available to provide help and guidance. In addition, two lectures are given during the lunch breaks.The first course in March 2007 was very successful. “This is the most interesting course I’ve ever participated in,” says Miclaus Gratian, MD, from the Neuromed Center of Diagnostic Imaging in Timisoara, Rumania. The course is most suited for Cardiologists and Radiologists with basic knowledge of cardiac CT. Upcoming Dates: 19–20 July 2007 (Course ID: ERL5) 20–21 Sept. 2007 (Course ID: ERL6) For online registration please go to the following link and select: ‘Professional Clinical Education’ and ‘Course schedule.’ Here you will also find information about all upcoming courses for 2007. Educate, stay up-to-date! www.siemens.com/ somatomeducate Exclusively during this clinical workshop: The participants could evaluate more than 50 datasets. 60 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Education & Events Free 90 Day Trial Licenses* for Clinical Applications Try the following advanced clinical applications: syngo® Neuro DSA and syngo Circulation 90 days for free! The clinically proven syngo Neuro DSA CT provides an easy, fast and fully automated method to improve the detection of intracranial aneurysms and subsequent therapy planning**. It facilitates optimal visualization and evaluation of complex intracranial and extracranial vascular structures, especially at the base of the skull, and helps to delineate aneurysms, stenoses, and other vascular diseases. syngo Circulation is your fast track to a complete, noninvasive cardiac evaluation in less than ten minutes. The intelligently designed, guided workflow will lead you effortlessly to a confident diagnosis, from quantitative coronary assessment and plaque analysis to left ventricular and myocardial analysis, ultimately fusing all your diagnostic findings into a single comprehensive report. For details regarding trial licenses, please consult your Siemens representative. * Minimum system requirements need to be fulfilled for these options to be available. Ask your Siemens representative to check your system configuration. ** Tomandl et al. AJNR 2006, 27: 55–59. Frequently Asked Questions How to turn mAs/ rot at the SOMATOM Definition into effective mAs? Please use the following formula: mAs/ rotation = 2 x mA x rotation time. When placing the mouse cursor over the mAs setting in the routine subtask card, you can see the corresponding value from the SOMATOM® Sensation 64-slice configuration. Further information can be found in the online help (F1 key). How can I display the cardiac phase information in the Browser? To display the cardiac phase, please open the Browser and deselect under Viewing the entry Image Stamps. Select Options – Configure Browser – Tree View – Instance. There you will find under Data Type CT Image. Select the entry Image Comment and add this via a click on the down arrow to Heading Settings. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 61 Education & Events E-Newsletter The CT monthly e-newsletter from Siemens Medical Solutions includes highlights on clinical outcomes, business, science and customer care topics. As subscriber, you will receive latest information on upcoming Siemens CT events and courses. Answers to frequently asked questions will be given, along with a section with tricks and tips on “how to …” efficiently use Siemens CT scanners and applications in daily clinical practice. Stay up-to-date with what is happening in the world of computed tomography with the Siemens Medical CT Newsletter. Subscribe via the following link, or with the postcard attached to the back cover of this magazine. www.siemens.com/ medicalnews Latest information with the monthly CT e-newsletter. Upcoming Events & Courses Title Location Short Description Date Contact ESC Vienna, Austria European Society of Cardiology Congress 2007 Sep. 1–5, 2007 www.escardio.org 9th Biennial ESTRO Meeting Barcelona, Spain European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology Sep. 8–13, 2007 www.estroweb.org ESNR Genova, Italy European Society of Neuroradiology Congress Sep. 20–23, 2007 www.esnr.org ESCR Rome, Italy Annual Scientific Meeting Oct. 18–20, 2007 www.escr.org JFR Paris, France Société Française de Radiologie Congrès Oct. 20 –24, 2007 www.sfrnet.org TCT Washington, USA Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics Symposium Oct. 20–25, 2007 www.tct2007.com AHA Orlando, USA American Heart Association Scientific Sessions Nov. 3–7, 2007 www.scientificsessions.org Medica Duesseldorf, Germany MEDICA 2006 Nov. 14–17, 2007 www.medica.de RSNA Chicago, USA Radiological Society of North America Nov. 25–30, 2007 www.rsna.org Moscow Healthcare Moscow, Russia Dec. 5–9, 2007 17th international Exhibition of Health Care, Medical Engineering and Pharmaceutics www-eng.expocentr.ru In addition, you can always find the latest CT courses offered by Siemens Medical Solutions at www.siemens.com/SOMATOMEducate 62 SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine Imprint SOMATOM Sessions – Imprint © 2007 by Siemens AG, Berlin and Munich, All rights reserved Publisher Siemens AG Medical Solutions Computed Tomography Division Siemensstraße 1 D-91301 Forchheim Responsible for Contents André Hartung Chief Editors Monika Demuth, PhD ([email protected]) Stefan Wünsch, PhD ([email protected]) A. Davis, MD, Hartsdale Imaging, Hartsdale, New York, USA A. Graser, MD, Department of Clinical Radiology, University Hospital of Munich-Grosshadern, Munich, Germany A. Hirayama, MD, Cardiovascular Division, Osaka Police Hospital, Osaka, Japan T. Johnson, MD, Department of Clinical Radiology , University Hospital of Munich-Grosshadern, Munich, Germany K. Kodama, MD, Cardiovascular Division, Osaka Police Hospital, Osaka, Japan Editorial Board Nina Bastian Thomas Flohr, PhD Murat Guengoer Louise McKenna, PhD Julia Kern-Stoll Axel Lorz Jens Scharnagl Bernhard Schmidt, PhD Heiko Tuttas Alexander Zimmermann S. Komatsu, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany and Cardiovascular Division, Osaka Police Hospital, Osaka, Japan Authors of this Issue S. Achenbach, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany A. Megibow, MD, MPH, FACR, Department of Radiology, NYU Medical Center, New York, USA K. Anders, MD, Institute of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany A. Aplas, MD, Department of Radiology University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany W. Bautz, MD, Institute of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany C. Becker, MD, Department of Clinical Radiology, University Hospital of Munich-Grosshadern, Munich, Germany A. Küttner, MD, Institute of Diagnostic Radiology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany A. Kuhlmann, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany A. Mahnken, MD, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany N. Mollet, MD, PhD, Departments of Radiology and Cardiology, Erasmus, Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands T. Pflederer, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany D. Ropers, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany U. Ropers, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany P. Seidensticker, MD, Global Medical Affairs Diagnostic Imaging, Bayer Schering Pharma AG, Berlin, Germany S.-H. Chu, MD, Cardiovascular Center, Far Eastern Memorial Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan J. Vlahos, MD, Department of Radiology, NYU Medical Center, New York, USA W. Daniel, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany M. Wechsel, MD, Department of Internal Medicine 2, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Erlangen, Germany Note in accordance with § 33 Para.1 of the German Federal Data Protection Law: Despatch is made using an address file which is maintained with the aid of an automated data processing system. SOMATOM Sessions with a total circulation of 35,000 copies is sent free of charge to Siemens Computed Tomography customers, qualified physicians and radiology departments throughout the world. It includes reports in the English language on Computed Tomography: diagnostic and therapeutic methods and their application as well as results and experience gained with corresponding systems and solutions. It introduces from case to case new principles and procedures and discusses their clinical potential. The statements and views of the authors in the individual contributions do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the publisher. The information presented in these articles and case reports is for illustration only and is not intended to be relied upon by the reader for instruction as to the practice of medicine. Any health care practitioner reading this information is reminded that they must use their own learning, training and expertise in dealing with their individual patients. This material does not substitute for that duty and is not intended by Siemens Medical Solutions to be used for any purpose in that A. Weustink, MD, Departments of Radiology and Cardiology, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands J. Wildberger, MD, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany Catherine Carrington, freelance author Tim Friend, freelance author Robert Harsieber, PhD, freelance author Frank Miltner, freelance author David J. Tenenbaum, freelance author Tony DeLisa, freelance author Karin Barthel; Nina Bastian; Dagmar Birk; Andreas Blaha; Wai Leng Chin; Jan Chudzik; Monika Demuth, PhD; Sonja Fischer; Tanja Gassert; Murat Guengoer; Christoph Hachmöller, MD; Loke-Gie Haw; Lars Hofmann, MD; Julia Kern-Stoll; Rami Kusama; Karin Ladenburger; Per-Anselm Mahr; Louise McKenna, PhD, MBA; Marion Meusel; Hiroshi Nakatsuji; Doris Pischitz; Gitta Schulz; Peter Seitz; Stefan Wünsch, PhD; Alexander Zimmermann; all Siemens Medical Solutions Production Norbert Moser, Siemens Medical Solutions Layout independent Medien-Design Widenmayerstrasse 16 D-80538 Munich Fotos Peter Rigaud (p. 10 –13), Imke Lass (p. 14 –15), Kurt Paulus (p. 22–24) PrePress MEDia_asset_pool, Waldstr. 18, 91054 Erlangen Printers Farbendruck Hofmann Gewerbestraße 5 D-90579 Langenzenn Printed in Germany SOMATOM Sessions is also available on the internet: www.siemens.com/SOMATOMWorld regard. The drugs and doses mentioned herein are consistent with the approval labeling for uses and/or indications of the drug. The treating physician bears the sole responsibility for the diagnosis and treatment of patients, including drugs and doses prescribed in connection with such use. The Operating Instructions must always be strictly followed when operating the CT System. The sources for the technical data are the corresponding data sheets. Results may vary. Partial reproduction in printed form of individual contributions is permitted, provided the customary bibliographical data such as author’s name and title of the contribution as well as year, issue number and pages of SOMATOM Sessions are named, but the editors request that two copies be sent to them. The written consent of the authors and publisher is required for the complete reprinting of an article. We welcome your questions and comments about the editorial content of SOMATOM Sessions. Manuscripts as well as suggestions, proposals and information are always welcome; they are carefully examined and submitted to the editorial board for attention. SOMATOM Sessions is not responsible for loss, damage, or any other injury to unsolicited manuscripts or other materials. We reserve the right to edit for clarity, accuracy, and space. Include your name, address, and phone number and send to the editors, address above. SOMATOM Sessions · June 2007 · www.siemens.com/medical-magazine 63 FREE SOMATOM Sessions Subscription Department Institution CT Scanner age CT Manufacturer CT Scanner type Please enter your business address Function Title Stay up to date with the latest CT information: Name Street Register for: the bi-annual CT customer magazine SOMATOM Sessions for free Postal Code City the monthly CT e-Newsletter E-mail State Country unsubscribe from info service FREE SUBSCRIBE NOW! SOMATOM Sessions D-91294 Forchheim Germany Siemens AG Medical Solutions Computed Tomography Division Marketing/Customer Care P.O. Box 1266 – and get your free copy of future SOMATOM Sessions! Interesting information from the world of computed tomography – gratis to your desk. Send us this postcard, or subscribe online at www.siemens.com/SOMATOM-World € 10.– www.siemens.com/ computed-tomography On account of certain regional limitations of sales rights and service availability, we cannot guarantee that all products included in this brochure are available through the Siemens sales organization worldwide. Availability and packaging may vary by country and is subject to change without prior notice. Some/All of the features and products described herein may not be available in the United States. The information in this document contains general technical descriptions of specifications and options as well as standard and optional features which do not always have to be present in individual cases. Siemens reserves the right to modify the design, packaging, specifications and options described herein without prior notice. Please contact your local Siemens sales representative for the most current information. Note: Any technical data contained in this document may vary within defined tolerances. Original images always lose a certain amount of detail when reproduced. © 06.2007, Siemens AG Order No. A91CT-00403-41M1-7600 Printed in Germany CC CT 00403 ZS 0607/35. Siemens AG Wittelsbacherplatz 2 D-80333 Muenchen Germany Headquarters Siemens AG, Medical Solutions Henkestr. 127, D-91052 Erlangen Germany Telephone: +49 9131 84-0 www.siemens.com/medical Contact Address Siemens Medical Solutions U.S.A., Inc. 51 Valley Stream Parkway Malvern, PA 19355-1406 USA Telephone: +1-888-826-9702