2009
DOI: 10.1016/s0012-3692(16)47719-6
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Frequency and Causes of False-Positive Ctpa Exams in Community Hospitals

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…In a 2011 study of 70 isolated subsegmental PEs by Pena et al [13], a reviewing thoracic radiologist reinterpreted 11% of these examinations as negative. In a separate abstract published by Miller et al [18], a single thoracic radiologist found a false-positive or probable false-positive rate of 11% at all pulmonary artery levels in 508 cases. Compared with these previous studies, the current study is larger and uses a panel of three subspecialty chest radiologists as a more robust surro- …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In a 2011 study of 70 isolated subsegmental PEs by Pena et al [13], a reviewing thoracic radiologist reinterpreted 11% of these examinations as negative. In a separate abstract published by Miller et al [18], a single thoracic radiologist found a false-positive or probable false-positive rate of 11% at all pulmonary artery levels in 508 cases. Compared with these previous studies, the current study is larger and uses a panel of three subspecialty chest radiologists as a more robust surro- …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In our study, the most common cause identified for the misdiagnosis of PE was motion artifact due to breathing, which accounted for 42.2% of cases. Breathing artifact has previously been shown to be the most common mimic of PE [18] as well as the most common cause of equivocal pulmonary CTA findings in up to 74% of cases [9]. Breathing artifact can most easily be identified on a lung window by the presence of the seagull artifact, the stair-step artifact, and rapid changes in position of vessels on contiguous image slices [10] (Fig.…”
Section: Overdiagnosis Of Pulmonary Embolism By Ctamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This rate is much higher than that in other recent studies. 24,25 This may be attributed to our patient group being at greater risk of PE compared to the general population receiving contrast-enhanced CTPA since our patients were selected from among subjects with at least one risk factor for CIN. At the same time, current knowledge shows that PEs diagnosed by contrast enhanced CTPA are frequently overdiagnosed.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%