Purpose: To investigate whether the presence of endocardial leads has an impact on image quality in coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), when current technique is employed using a 320-row computed tomography and iterative reconstruction.
Materials and methods: CCTA was performed in 1641 patients, from these we identified 51 patients (study group) with endocardial leads and 51 matched partners (control group) without endocardial leads. Noise was determined in the ascending aorta and the left ventricle; signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) were determined in the left and right coronary artery. Subjective image quality was rated separately for the 15 segments of the coronary arteries by 2 radiologists.
Results: Current CCTA technique still shows slight impairment of objective image quality in patients with endocardial leads with inferior SNR in the aorta (median 15.04 versus 16.6; p = 0.004) and inferior SNR in the left/right coronary artery (median 15.3/13.81 versus 16.1/15.41; p = 0.013/0.002). CNR of the left/right coronary artery was also inferior (median 17.4/16.46 versus 19.26/19.24; p = 0.002/<0.001). The subjective image quality was rated significantly inferior only in segment 8 (p = 0.001) compared to the control group. Artifacts by ventricular leads were found in 65% of the patients in segment 8 with non-diagnostic rating in 9 cases (18%). Atrial leads resulted in artifacts predominantly in segment 1 (45%) with non-diagnostic rating in only 2 cases (4%).
Conclusion: CCTA is feasible with slight restrictions for patients in the presence of implanted cardiac devices when current technique is used.
Keywords: Cardiac imaging techniques; Cardiac pacemaker; Computed tomography angiography; Coronary artery disease; Image quality.
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