Download ppt - CT of the Chest

Transcript
Page 1: CT of the Chest

CT of the ChestCT of the Chest

Dorith Shaham, M.D.

Department of Radiology

Hadassah Medical Center

Page 2: CT of the Chest

Indications for Chest CTIndications for Chest CT

• To evaluate abnormalities shown on CXR

• To demonstrate or exclude a suspected CXR abnormality

• To demonstrate an abnormality in a patient with a normal CXR

Page 3: CT of the Chest

Types of Chest CTTypes of Chest CT

• Standard chest CT– Without IV contrast– With IV contrast

• CT-angiography– PCTA (r/o PE)– Coronary CTA

• HRCT• CT-guided intervention

– Biopsy– Pleural drainage

• Low-dose CT

Page 4: CT of the Chest

IV contrastIV contrast

• Not used for pulmonary parenchimal abnormalities– Inherent high contrast

• Always used for CT-angiography• May be used for evaluation of

– Mediastinum – Hilum– Pleura

Page 5: CT of the Chest

Metastatic Lung Ca Metastatic Lung Ca (Adenocarcinoma)(Adenocarcinoma)

Rt. Hilar mass and small pleural effusionRt. Hilar mass and small pleural effusion

Without IV contrast

Page 6: CT of the Chest

Anterior Mediastinal Mass : Anterior Mediastinal Mass : Germ cell tumorGerm cell tumor

Without IV contrast With IV contrast

Page 7: CT of the Chest

Chest CT Chest CT with IV contrastwith IV contrast

SVC syndrome

ThrombusVenous collaterals

Page 8: CT of the Chest

CT-AngiographyCT-Angiography

Page 9: CT of the Chest

Pulmonary Embolism:Pulmonary Embolism:Imaging ModalitiesImaging Modalities

• Chest X-ray

• V/Q scan

• Computed tomographyComputed tomography– Helical (spiral) CTHelical (spiral) CT

• MRI

• Pulmonary angiography: the “gold standard”

Page 10: CT of the Chest

69- year old female with 69- year old female with shortness of breathshortness of breath

Page 11: CT of the Chest
Page 12: CT of the Chest
Page 13: CT of the Chest

Ventilation-perfusion (V/Q) scanVentilation-perfusion (V/Q) scan

• Perfusion scan: distribution of blood flow– Macroaggregated human serum albumin (10-100

micron) labeled with Tc-99m

• Ventilation scan: distribution of alveolar ventilation– Radioactive inert gas: X-133

• V/Q mismatchV/Q mismatch: abnormal perfusion and normal ventilation

Page 14: CT of the Chest

Interpretation of V/Q scanningInterpretation of V/Q scanning

• Probability stratification approach (based on the assumption that the only reason for performing a V/Q scan is to diagnose PE):– High probability– Intermediate probability/ indeterminate– Low probability– Normal

Page 15: CT of the Chest
Page 16: CT of the Chest

Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Prospective Investigation of Pulmonary Embolism DiagnosisEmbolism Diagnosis (PIOPED) (PIOPED)

• Multi-institutional study conducted in the mid-80’s,

• Purpose: to determine the sensitivity and specificity of V/Q scan compared with pulmonary angiogram

• 933 patients with suspected PE – 931 had V/Q scan

– 755 had pulmonary angiography

• Study patients were followed clinically for 1 Y

Page 17: CT of the Chest

PIOPED STUDYPIOPED STUDY

• High sensitivity of V/Q scan:

98% of patients with PE had abnormal scans (low, intermediate or high probability)

• Low specificity: 10%

• Non-diagnostic V/Q scans: 72%

Page 18: CT of the Chest

CTPACTPA

• Direct visualization of clot

• Imaging of associated findings– Pulmonary infarction– Pleural effusion

• Imaging of alternative diagnosis

Page 19: CT of the Chest

Pulmonary EmbolismPulmonary Embolism

Page 20: CT of the Chest

Pulmonary Embolism Pulmonary Embolism with Infarctionwith Infarction

Atelectasis

Infarction

Page 21: CT of the Chest

Pulmonary EmbolismPulmonary Embolism

Page 22: CT of the Chest

Combined PCTA/CTVCombined PCTA/CTV

• No additional contrast injection

• Rapid examination

• Imaging of portions of the deep venous system that are inadequately imaged by Duplex (pelvic veins, adductor canal)

Page 23: CT of the Chest

HL: Massive PE

Page 24: CT of the Chest

HL: Bilateral DVT

Page 25: CT of the Chest

PIOPED IIPIOPED II

• To determine the sensitivity, specificity, positive/negative predictive value of spiral CT for the diagnosis of PE.

• Reference for PE: various combinations of– V/P scan– Venous U/S– Pulmonary angiography– Contrast venography

Page 26: CT of the Chest

PIOPED IIPIOPED II

• 824 patients with suspected PE

• CTPA alone:– Sensitivity: 83%– Specificity: 96%– PPV: 96% (concordant high/low clinical probability),

92% (intermediate clinical probability)

Page 27: CT of the Chest

PIOPED IIPIOPED II

• Combined CTPA + CTV:– Sensitivity: 90%– Specificity: 95%

• Additional testing is necessary when clinical probability is inconsistent with imaging results

N Engl J Med 2006;354:2317-27

Page 28: CT of the Chest

15-year old male with chest pain15-year old male with chest pain

Page 29: CT of the Chest
Page 30: CT of the Chest

Intramural hematoma

Pericardial effusion

Small right pleural effusion

Page 31: CT of the Chest

Collateral blood flow

Page 32: CT of the Chest

Coarctation of the aorta with enlarged internal mammary arteries

Page 33: CT of the Chest

CT Coronary AngiographyCT Coronary Angiography

Page 34: CT of the Chest

High Resolution CT (HRCT)High Resolution CT (HRCT)

Page 35: CT of the Chest

HRCT: HRCT: TechniqueTechnique

• Narrow slice width

• “Bone” reconstruction algorithm

• Small field of view

Page 36: CT of the Chest

HRCT: Ground glass opacityHRCT: Ground glass opacity

HRCTChest CT

Page 37: CT of the Chest

HRCT: scanning protocolsHRCT: scanning protocols

• 1-mm slices every 10-mm/ Contiguous 1-mm slices

• Supine/ Prone

• Full inspiration/ Expiration

Page 38: CT of the Chest

HRCT: patterns of lung diseaseHRCT: patterns of lung disease

• Reticular and short linear

• Nodular

• Increased lung opacity (“ground glass”)

• Decreased lung density– Cysts– Emphysema– Bronchiectasis

Page 39: CT of the Chest

CT vs. HRCTCT vs. HRCT

Multiple tiny perilymphatic nodulesSarcoidosis

Page 40: CT of the Chest

HRCT: BronchiectasisHRCT: Bronchiectasis

Page 41: CT of the Chest

CT-guided Needle BiopsyCT-guided Needle Biopsy

Page 42: CT of the Chest

IndicationsIndications

• Evaluation of – Solitary pulmonary nodule– Multiple pulmonary nodules– Mediastinal/hilar masses/lymphadenopathy– Chest wall masses

• Retrieval of organisms from infectious lung lesions

• Staging of tumors (lung cancer, extrathoracic)

Page 43: CT of the Chest

ContraindicationsContraindications

• An uncooperative patient

• Bleeding diathesis– INR>1.3– Platelet count<50,000 mm3

• Severe underlying lung disease– emphysema

• Intractable cough

Page 44: CT of the Chest

Image GuidanceImage Guidance

• CT• Fluoroscopy

– visualization in 2 projections

• Ultrasound– chest wall– pleura– anterior mediastinum– lung periphery

Page 45: CT of the Chest

Advantages of CT-guided BiopsyAdvantages of CT-guided Biopsy

• Needle path that avoids– aerated lung– fissures– large vessels– bullae– vital cardiovascular structures

• Differentiation of necrotic vs. viable portions of tumor– I.V. contrast

Page 46: CT of the Chest

Biopsy NeedlesBiopsy Needles::Westcott and TurnerWestcott and Turner

Page 47: CT of the Chest

Biopsy Needles:Biopsy Needles: Cutting Spring-AcivatedCutting Spring-Acivated

Page 48: CT of the Chest

Lung Biopsy: SPNLung Biopsy: SPN(Squamous cell ca.)(Squamous cell ca.)

Page 49: CT of the Chest

Lung Biopsy: Lung Biopsy: Multiple nodulesMultiple nodules((Alveolar soft part sarcoma)Alveolar soft part sarcoma)

Page 50: CT of the Chest

Rib Biopsy: Multiple myelomaRib Biopsy: Multiple myeloma

Page 51: CT of the Chest

Cytologic SpecimenCytologic Specimen

Page 52: CT of the Chest

CT-guided biopsy: ComplicationsCT-guided biopsy: Complications

• Pneumothorax

• Hemorrhage

Page 53: CT of the Chest

Drainage of Intrathoracic Drainage of Intrathoracic CollectionsCollections

Page 54: CT of the Chest

IndicationsIndications

• Malignant pleural effusion

• Empyema/ parapneumonic effusions

• Lung abscess

Page 55: CT of the Chest

Contraindications (relative) Contraindications (relative)

• Clotting deficiency– INR < 1.5– Thrombocytopenia (< 50,000 cells/ml)– Anticoagulation therapy

Page 56: CT of the Chest

Catheter PlacementCatheter Placement

• One step (trocar)

• Seldinger technique

Page 57: CT of the Chest

Drainage Catheters: Drainage Catheters: One Step

Page 58: CT of the Chest

Drainage CathetersDrainage Catheters: Seldinger technique

Page 59: CT of the Chest

Drainage of Empyema: PostpartumDrainage of Empyema: Postpartum

Page 60: CT of the Chest

Low-dose CT: Lung cancer Low-dose CT: Lung cancer screeningscreening

Page 61: CT of the Chest

Baseline Findings- ELCAPBaseline Findings- ELCAP

• Low dose CT greatly increases the likelihood of detection of NCN and early lung cancer compared with chest radiography– NCN:NCN: 3 times as commonly– Malignant tumors:Malignant tumors: 4 times as commonly– Stage I tumors:Stage I tumors: 6 times as commonly

Henschke et al, Lancet 1999; 354:99-105

Page 62: CT of the Chest

Low-dose CTLow-dose CT

Page 63: CT of the Chest

Low-dose CT: Lung cancerLow-dose CT: Lung cancer

Page 64: CT of the Chest

Low-dose CT and HRCTLow-dose CT and HRCT

1 year later

Page 65: CT of the Chest

HRCT 3 months later: HRCT 3 months later: Lung cancerLung cancer

Page 66: CT of the Chest

I-ELCAP results I-ELCAP results ((N Engl J Med 2006;355:1763-71)N Engl J Med 2006;355:1763-71)

• 31,567 asymptomatic persons at risk for lung cancer screened using low-dose CT (1993-2005)

• Stage I lung cancer diagnosed in 412/484 (85%)

• 10-year survival in stage I lung cancer– Overall: 88%– Surgical resection in 1 month: 92%

Page 67: CT of the Chest

National Lung Screening Trial (NLST)National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) ( (N Engl J Med 2011;365:395-409)N Engl J Med 2011;365:395-409)

• Started in 2002• >53,000 current and former heavy smokers, ages 55

to 74• compared the effects of two screening procedures for

lung cancer – – low-dose helical computed tomography (CT) – standard chest X-ray

• 20% fewer lung cancer deaths among trial participants screened with low-dose helical CT– Lung cancer deaths in CT-screened: 354, in CXR

screened: 442 (p=0.0041)


Recommended