Purpose: The purpose of this work was to assess the optimal scan delay for spiral CT angiography (SCTA) of the renal arteries in achieving optimal vascular contrast enhancement and to compare the utility of a delay based on these bolus injection versus that of a fixed scan delay.
Method: Seventy patients underwent renal artery SCTA with a 140 ml bolus of contrast agent injected a 3 ml/s. In 35 patients (Group A), a fixed scan delay of 27 s was used; in the other 35 (Group B), the scan delay was based on the transit time (TTest) of a test bolus injection. The scan delays in this group were set at TTest + 5 s (n = 5), TTest + 10 s (n = 8), TTest + 15 s (n = 4), or TTest + 20 s (n = 18). For all 70 patients, the time intervals between TRA (time to scanning the renal arteries) and TMax (time to maximum aortic enhancement after 140 ml bolus injection) were calculated, after which it was determined in which group of patients TRA occurred closest to TMax. Linear regression and mean squared error (MSE) were used for statistical analysis.
Results: For Group A, mean TRA and TMax were 38 and 50 s, respectively. Mean (TRA - TMax) was -12 s with MSE of 185.76. For Group B, mean TRA and Tmax were 45 and 52 s. Mean (TRA - TMax) values were -15, -12, -11, and -1 s for scan delays of TTEST + 5 s, TTEST + 10 s, TTest + 15 s, and TTEST + 20 s, respectively, with MSEs of 253.80, 158.00, 137.50, and 30.00.
Conclusion: SCTA of the renal arteries was best performed with a scan delay of TTEST + 20 s. However, analysis of our data showed that similar results could be expected with a delay of 44 s.