1998
DOI: 10.1148/radiology.208.1.9646814
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Pulmonary embolism: diagnosis with spiral CT and ventilation-perfusion scanning--correlation with pulmonary angiographic results or clinical outcome.

Abstract: Spiral CT has greater accuracy and specificity than V-P scanning in patients with an unresolved diagnosis and may be useful as the primary screening technique for PE.

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Cited by 212 publications
(90 citation statements)
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“…Compared with single-slice CT, and for a similar degree of functional impairment, we observed a significantly higher proportion of CT angiograms devoid of respiratory (64 vs 38%) and cardiac motion artifacts (62 vs 40%) with multislice CT. Because of the well-known difficulties in assessing acute PE in patients with underlying respiratory disease, the benefit of multislice CT, which allows obtainment of a higher number of examinations interpretable down to the subsegmental pulmonary arterial bed compared with single slice CT, is emphasized. As underlined by several investigators [2,4,14,15], the limitations of single-slice CT in the detection of clots in small vessels are related mainly to lower spatial resolution and to the fact that subsegmental vessels of the upper and lower lobes frequently lie outside the limits of z-axis coverage. Consequently, the remaining indications of pulmonary angiography, namely the exclusion of subsegmental PE after a negative CT angiogram down to the segmental level, are expected to dramatically decline with the widespread availability of multislice CT scanners.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compared with single-slice CT, and for a similar degree of functional impairment, we observed a significantly higher proportion of CT angiograms devoid of respiratory (64 vs 38%) and cardiac motion artifacts (62 vs 40%) with multislice CT. Because of the well-known difficulties in assessing acute PE in patients with underlying respiratory disease, the benefit of multislice CT, which allows obtainment of a higher number of examinations interpretable down to the subsegmental pulmonary arterial bed compared with single slice CT, is emphasized. As underlined by several investigators [2,4,14,15], the limitations of single-slice CT in the detection of clots in small vessels are related mainly to lower spatial resolution and to the fact that subsegmental vessels of the upper and lower lobes frequently lie outside the limits of z-axis coverage. Consequently, the remaining indications of pulmonary angiography, namely the exclusion of subsegmental PE after a negative CT angiogram down to the segmental level, are expected to dramatically decline with the widespread availability of multislice CT scanners.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although pulmonary ventilation (1, 2) and perfusion (3,4) can be examined by a variety of imaging techniques, currently no methods exist to image alveolar-capillary gas transfer. Yet certain pulmonary pathologies such as inflammation, fibrosis, and edema may initially have a predominant effect on the gas exchange process but not on ventilation or perfusion.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…29 Revised criteria for the interpretation of ventilation-perfusion examinations 30,31 and novel technologies in nuclear medicine such as SPECT 32 can decrease the proportion of indeterminate scintigraphic studies but cannot offset the limitations inherent to a functional imaging test. 33 Different from other imaging tests, ventilation-perfusion scintigraphy is an indirect test for PE based on assessment of pulmonary perfusion. This differs from imaging modalities that allow direct visualization (Figure 1) of PE and other thoracic pathology.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%