DOI:10.2214/AJR.07.2138
AJR 2007; 189:581-591
© American Roentgen Ray Society
Artifacts in ECG-Synchronized MDCT Coronary Angiography
L. J. M. Kroft1,
A. de Roos and
J. Geleijns
1 All authors: Department of Radiology, C2S, Leiden University Medical Center,
Albinusdreef 2, 2333 ZA, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Received December 11, 2006;
accepted after revision March 8, 2007.
Address correspondence to L. J. M. Kroft
(l.j.m.kroft{at}lumc.nl).
CME This article is available for CME credit. See
www.arrs.org
for more information.
FOR YOUR INFORMATION
This article is available for CME credit. See
www.arrs.org
for more information.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE. In MDCT coronary angiography, image artifacts are the
major cause of false-positive and false-negative interpretations regarding the
presence of coronary artery stenoses. Hence, it is important that observers
reporting these investigations are aware of the potential presence of image
artifacts and that these artifacts are recognized.
CONCLUSION. The article explores the technical causes for various
artifacts in MDCT coronary angiography imaging and clinical examples are
given.
Keywords: artifacts cardiac imaging computed tomography coronary angiography CT diagnostic imaging
Introduction
From the first 4-MDCT feasibility studies to the current clinically
applied 64-MDCT investigations, MDCT coronary angiography has evolved into a
reliable 3D imaging technique for detecting and excluding coronary artery
stenoses with high accuracy
[1-8];
it is now considered an appropriate imaging tool for detecting coronary artery
disease in certain clinical contexts
[9]. However, 2D conventional
invasive X-ray coronary angiography is still considered the standard of
reference for evaluating the coronary arteries because of its superior spatial
and temporal resolutions compared with MDCT. Parts of the coronary arteries
cannot be evaluated with MDCT because of image artifacts, and image artifacts
are the major cause of false-positive and false-negative interpretations.
Hence, it is important that observers reporting MDCT coronary artery
angiography investigations are aware of the potential presence of image
artifacts and that these artifacts are recognized on the images.
In this article, the impact of artifacts on MDCT coronary angiography will
be explained. The causes of artifacts will be discussed in detail, with
special attention to the effect of coronary artery size and motion. Examples
of artifacts will be shown that may help the reader recognize these artifacts
when reporting MDCT coronary angiography.
Impact of Artifacts on MDCT Coronary Angiography
MDCT coronary angiography image quality and diagnostic performance have
greatly improved after recent technical developments. With 4-MDCT, 29% of the
coronary arteries could not be evaluated because of artifacts
[1]. With 16-MDCT, 22-29% of
the coronary artery segments could not be evaluated
[10,
11]. One study stated that if
these segments that could not be evaluated were excluded or considered
negative, 25% of patients with a significant stenosis would have been missed
[11]. With 64-MDCT, 3-11% of
coronary artery segments still cannot be evaluated
[8,
12-15].
Sensitivities and specificities for detecting significant (3
50%) coronary artery stenoses based on segmental analysis with 64-MDCT
(conventional X-ray coronary angiography as the standard of reference) have
been found to be good to excellent, in the range of 76-99% and 95-97%,
respectively
[2-8,
16]. However, these study
outcomes are difficult to compare because the study methods vary
substantially—for example, in the selection of patients. Moreover, these
study results should be interpreted with care because coronary artery segments
that could not be evaluated (3-27%) were excluded from analysis beforehand
[2-5,
7,
8].
Interestingly, of the coronary artery segments that were included in
64-MDCT studies, the accuracy for detecting stenoses depended highly on image
artifacts. False-positive and false-negative interpretations were attributed
to image artifacts in 91% [6]
to 100% [5] of cases, where the
major cause was the presence of calcifications. Other authors support these
findings
[2-4,
6]. Less frequent causes were
motion artifacts [4,
5] and obesity resulting in a
poor contrast-to-noise ratio
[4]. It can be concluded that
artifacts are the cause of coronary arteries that cannot be evaluated and for
false-positive and false-negative diagnoses as well.
MDCT and Artifacts
Artifact Definition
In CT, the term "image artifact" can be defined as any
discrepancy between the reconstructed Hounsfield values in the image and the
true attenuation coefficients of the object in such a way that these
discrepancies are clinically significant or relevant as judged by the
radiologist [17]. In the
definition, it is assumed that the radiologist will recognize relevant
artifacts when they are present.
Technical Considerations for Coronary Artery Imaging and Artifacts
Coronary artery MDCT is technically complex and requires high spatial
resolution, high temporal resolution, good low-contrast resolution,
intravascular contrast enhancement, and a short scanning time. The key
acquisition parameters in cardiac MDCT are section thickness, the rotation
time of the X-ray tube, and the pitch factor. The acquisition section
thickness is measured along the z-axis and determines the minimal
voxel height in a reconstructed image. The rotation time (in milliseconds) is
the time needed for a 360° rotation of the X-ray tube. The pitch factor is
the ratio of patient displacement along the z-axis direction per tube
rotation divided by the total thickness of all simultaneously acquired
sections [18].
Basically, almost all MDCT image artifacts can be explained by limitations
relating to spatial resolution, temporal resolution, noise
(Table 1), and the
reconstruction algorithms used. In the images, artifacts are mainly observed
as blurring, blooming, streaks, missing data, discontinuities, and poor
contrast enhancement. Artifacts may be grouped in technical- (physics-based,
scanner-based, and reconstruction-based), operator-, and patient-related
causes [19]. Defining the
different artifact categories seems rather arbitrary. For example, poor
patient instruction that results in breathing artifacts may be categorized as
an operator-dependent artifact, whereas breathing artifacts that occur despite
adequate breath-holding instructions may be considered patient-dependent.
Spatial Resolution, Temporal Resolution, Noise, and Reconstruction Algorithm
Spatial Resolution
Spatial resolution, the ability to visualize small structures in the
scanned volume, must be considered in three dimensions. A voxel is the volume
element that is represented by a 2D pixel in the axial xy-plane. The
third dimension is the z-axis and the corresponding voxel height. A
reconstructed field of view of 200 mm and a characteristic 512 x 512
pixel matrix result in a pixel size of 0.4 x 0.4 mm2 in the
axial xy-plane. These values are typical for single-detector helical
CT acquisitions and for the current MDCT scanners. Reconstructions with a
smaller field of view can substantially decrease the pixel size in the axial
plane.
The great improvement in spatial resolution with the current MDCT scanners
is due to the feasibility of acquiring volumes with thinner sections, which is
especially important for reduction of the partial volume effect. With 4-MDCT,
4 x 1 mm or 2 mm collimation scans were obtained in 20- to 45-second
breath-holds [1,
20-22].
With 16-MDCT, 16 x 0.5 mm or 0.75 mm collimation scans were obtained in
16- to 30-second breath-holds
[23-25].
With 64-slice and 64-row MDCT scanners, 64 x 0.6 mm and 64 x 0.5
mm collimations are achieved within 11- to 15-second breath-holds
[2,
5,
6]. Thinner collimation causes
smaller voxel height, and shorter breath-holds allow more patients to hold
their breath during image acquisition. Also, the scanned volume is obtained in
substantially fewer heart beats, thereby decreasing the amount of image
artifacts due to variations between heart beats.

View larger version (10K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 1A —Principle of full width at half maximum (FWHM) of response of very
small object for describing spatial resolution that can be achieved.
Visualization of two ideal points separated by distance of less than one FWHM
(A) and separated more than one FWHM (B). Response of ideal
point is represented by gray area; composite response of two ideal points is
represented by curving black line. At separation distance of less than one
FWHM, two points cannot be distinguished separately; at distance of more than
one FWHM, two points can be observed individually. Note that this criterion
assumes static condition, or, in other words, that no motion artifacts are
present.
|
|

View larger version (11K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 1B —Principle of full width at half maximum (FWHM) of response of very
small object for describing spatial resolution that can be achieved.
Visualization of two ideal points separated by distance of less than one FWHM
(A) and separated more than one FWHM (B). Response of ideal
point is represented by gray area; composite response of two ideal points is
represented by curving black line. At separation distance of less than one
FWHM, two points cannot be distinguished separately; at distance of more than
one FWHM, two points can be observed individually. Note that this criterion
assumes static condition, or, in other words, that no motion artifacts are
present.
|
|
However, voxel size alone is not sufficient for describing the spatial
resolution that can be achieved with CT scanners. Voxel size does not take
into account the inherent physical limitations of the CT scanner such as focal
spot size, detector size, and geometry (focus-to-axis of rotation distance and
focus-to-detector distance) that result in geometric unsharpness
[26]. The unambiguous and
clearly defined quantity that physicists use for describing spatial resolution
is the full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the response of a very small
object. In CT, a tungsten bead with a submillimeter diameter is often used as
the small object for which the FWHM is determined. Once the FWHM is
established for a scanner, one knows at what separation distance two points
can be distinguished separately and at what separation distance two points are
perceived as one point. If two ideal points are separated just a distance FWHM
apart (or more), there is a fair chance that they will be separated in the
image. If the points are separated less than a distance FWHM, then the points
will be visualized as one point (Fig.
1A,
1B). Typical values for the
FWHM in the axial plane are 0.5-0.7 mm; the FWHM along the z-axis is
slightly worse, with typical values between 0.7 and 1.0 mm
[27]. This means that
structures with dimensions smaller than the FWHM of the point-spread function
will be severely distorted in the reconstructed images, even if a small
reconstructed field of view with correspondingly small voxels is being used.
In clinical applications of MDCT coronary angiography, this aspect should be
taken into account—for example, when coronary artery plaque
(characterization) is considered and for imaging of small coronary artery
vessels.
Partial Volume Effect
Partial volume effect or artifact is caused by limited spatial resolution
and is the result of averaging the attenuation coefficient in a voxel that is
heterogeneous in composition, where the average numeric value (in Hounsfield
units) is assigned to the corresponding pixel. Partial volume effect is
especially present at borders of two tissues or structures with a large
difference in Hounsfield units, particularly at the margin of the coronary
artery lumen and calcified plaque. The larger the voxels (i.e., pixel size and
reconstructed image thickness), the larger the partial volume effect
[18]. Partial volume artifacts
are most often due to the presence of calcifications and are a major concern
in MDCT coronary angiography because they cause false-positive and
false-negative interpretations in coronary arteries that could otherwise be
evaluated
[2-6].
Partial volume artifacts, including blurring and blooming, are best avoided by
using thin collimation and a small reconstructed field of view
[19].
Temporal Resolution
Temporal resolution is the ability to resolve fast-moving objects in the
displayed CT image [18].
Temporal resolution remains the major challenge in MDCT coronary angiography.
Limitations in temporal resolution are strongly related to coronary artery
size and motion. Motion in general causes degradation of contrast and spatial
resolution and introduces artifacts
[28]. Cardiac motion presents
as blurring and is the major reason for nondiagnostic coronary artery image
quality
[11-13].
The three major approaches to limit cardiac motion artifacts were already
postulated in the 1970s by Harell et al.
[29]: reducing the data
collection period by faster rotating X-ray tubes, synchronizing CT data
acquisition with the cardiac cycle (prospective gating), and reconstructions
synchronized to the ECG cycle (retrospective reconstructions) after data
acquisition. These measures are currently routinely applied in MDCT coronary
angiography.

View larger version (21K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 2A —59-year-old man imaged for suspected coronary artery disease.
Stairstep artifact due to premature atrial contraction with extra systole,
followed by compensatory long R-R interval (between sixth and seventh R-R
peaks) Note that premature beat is approximately in middle of acquisition
(A), which is also true in images (B-D). Note stairstep in right
coronary artery (RCA) (arrows) at 3D reconstructions and central
luminal line projections (B) and in two long-axis perpendicular curved
multiplanar reconstructions (C, D). In these perpendicular
curved multiplanar reconstructions, coronary artery is usually more affected
in one direction than in other. Step had virtually no effect on left anterior
descending coronary artery (LAD in B). Mean heart rate was 59 beats per
minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 644 and 1,281
milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (63K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 2B —59-year-old man imaged for suspected coronary artery disease.
Stairstep artifact due to premature atrial contraction with extra systole,
followed by compensatory long R-R interval (between sixth and seventh R-R
peaks) Note that premature beat is approximately in middle of acquisition
(A), which is also true in images (B-D). Note stairstep in right
coronary artery (RCA) (arrows) at 3D reconstructions and central
luminal line projections (B) and in two long-axis perpendicular curved
multiplanar reconstructions (C, D). In these perpendicular
curved multiplanar reconstructions, coronary artery is usually more affected
in one direction than in other. Step had virtually no effect on left anterior
descending coronary artery (LAD in B). Mean heart rate was 59 beats per
minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 644 and 1,281
milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (95K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 2C —59-year-old man imaged for suspected coronary artery disease.
Stairstep artifact due to premature atrial contraction with extra systole,
followed by compensatory long R-R interval (between sixth and seventh R-R
peaks) Note that premature beat is approximately in middle of acquisition
(A), which is also true in images (B-D). Note stairstep in right
coronary artery (RCA) (arrows) at 3D reconstructions and central
luminal line projections (B) and in two long-axis perpendicular curved
multiplanar reconstructions (C, D). In these perpendicular
curved multiplanar reconstructions, coronary artery is usually more affected
in one direction than in other. Step had virtually no effect on left anterior
descending coronary artery (LAD in B). Mean heart rate was 59 beats per
minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 644 and 1,281
milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (95K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 2D —59-year-old man imaged for suspected coronary artery disease.
Stairstep artifact due to premature atrial contraction with extra systole,
followed by compensatory long R-R interval (between sixth and seventh R-R
peaks) Note that premature beat is approximately in middle of acquisition
(A), which is also true in images (B-D). Note stairstep in right
coronary artery (RCA) (arrows) at 3D reconstructions and central
luminal line projections (B) and in two long-axis perpendicular curved
multiplanar reconstructions (C, D). In these perpendicular
curved multiplanar reconstructions, coronary artery is usually more affected
in one direction than in other. Step had virtually no effect on left anterior
descending coronary artery (LAD in B). Mean heart rate was 59 beats per
minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 644 and 1,281
milliseconds.
|
|
Irregular heart rates cause stairstep artifacts due to phase
misregistration, in which images are not reconstructed at exactly the same
phase of the heart cycle [30]
(Fig. 2A,
2B,
2C,
2D). Irregular heart
rates—for example, premature atrial contraction—can also cause
blurring of a coronary artery segment (Fig.
3). ECG editing may reduce these artifacts.

View larger version (75K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 3 —54-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease.
Image shows blurring due to motion caused by premature atrial contraction. At
short R-R interval, rest phase was too short for motion-free imaging of
coronary artery segment that presumably had large motion range at this time,
causing blurring. This segment of right coronary artery is frequently affected
by motion artifacts. Mean heart rate was 66 beats per minute. R-R interval
during acquisition varied between 641 and 1,194 milliseconds.
|
|
Coronary Artery Size and Motion
Mean coronary artery lumen diameters vary substantially from their proximal
to their distal parts [31].
More than half the segments are smaller than 2.0 mm and have less image
quality than those segments larger than 2.0 mm at 64-MDCT
[14].
The coronary arteries move substantially during the cardiac cycle with
considerable intra- and interpatient variation regarding motion patterns and
ranges [32]. The right
coronary artery has the greatest velocity and range
[33,
34]. Transverse (axial
xy-plane) displacement is the major part of motion and ranges between
6 and 42 mm for the right and between 3 and 20 mm for the left coronary artery
[32]. Motion velocity
increases with heart rate [33,
34], but motion range does not
[32]. The right coronary
artery is affected most by motion artifacts
[12].
Excessive coronary artery motion of an in-plane distance greater than its
diameter corresponds to visible motion on transverse images
[33]. This amount of
"own diameter motion" seems a rather comfortable criterion,
particularly when the limitations in temporal resolution affect CT of small
structures (small-diameter coronary artery segments). With the current MDCT
scanners, coronary artery motion exceeds the velocities needed for motion-free
imaging when variations in cardiac motion during the cardiac cycle are not
taken into account. However, motion velocity and speed change during the
cardiac cycle, and we must use the "rest phase" for imaging with
the fewest motion artifacts (Fig.
4). But even then, the cardiac rest period, defined as the time
with a displacement of the coronary artery of less than 1 mm, has a mean
duration of 120 milliseconds but ranges from 66 to 333 milliseconds among
patients [32]. Consequently,
the temporal resolution of 165 milliseconds that is currently achieved with
the fastest 330-millisecond rotation times when using half-scan
reconstructions is longer than the mean rest period of 120 milliseconds and is
not fast enough to image the general patient free of motion artifacts,
notwithstanding optimal phase selection for image reconstruction in the
cardiac cycle.

View larger version (99K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 4 —51-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease.
Image shows motion range for right coronary artery (RCA) during cardiac cycle.
Image reconstructions were performed at 0%, 40%, and 80% of R-R interval and
show identical orientation of 3D images in upper row and identical levels of
images in middle row. In lower row, level that best displayed origin of RCA is
displayed. Note large amount of motion of RCA during cardiac cycle. Note that
RCA is displayed sharply at 80% of R-R interval, but not at 0% and 40% time
phases. Mean heart rate was 52 beats per minute. R-R interval during
acquisition varied between 1,095 and 1,189 milliseconds.
|
|
With heart rates of less than 65 beats per minute (bpm), the best image
quality is predominantly in diastole, whereas in heart rates exceeding 75 bpm,
the best image quality shifts to systole in most cases
[1,
13,
35]. Increasing heart rates
mainly affect and significantly shorten the rest period at diastole
[1,
32]. Choosing the optimal time
point for reconstruction becomes more crucial for preserving image quality
with higher heart rates [34].
With 64-MDCT and at heart rates less than 65 bpm, diagnostic image quality can
be obtained for all coronary arteries at a single reconstruction interval at
mid diastole [15]. When higher
heart rates are included, a minority of patients (7%) require additional
reconstructions at late systole for optimal visualization of the right
coronary artery [12].
To overcome limitations in temporal resolution and motion artifacts,
increased gantry rotation speed is favored. However, a rotation time of less
than 200 milliseconds to provide a temporal resolution of less than 100
milliseconds, regardless of cardiac frequency (half-scan reconstruction),
would already result in an increase in mechanical G-forces that is beyond
mechanical engineering limits
[36]. Other strategies are as
follows:
Lowering the cardiac frequency by using ß-blockers or
dilating the coronary arteries by using nitroglycerin—Coronary
artery image quality is inversely dependent on heart rate
[1,
4,
12,
20,
21,
37]. Administering
ß-blockers for coronary artery MDCT is widely used for reducing the heart
rate, preferably to a frequency of less than 60-65 bpm
[2-5,
7,
8,
38]. Despite these
publications, it has recently been found that the effect of heart rate on
image quality is limited and mainly affects the visualization of the left
circumflex coronary artery. Instead, the variability in heart rate during
acquisition was found to be important. The stabilizing effect of
ß-blockers was shown to be the major determinant that resulted in
superior image quality in patients receiving ß-blockers as compared with
those who did not [39]. Some
authors use vasodilating medication as well for maximizing coronary artery
size [40,
41]. In MDCT coronary
angiography, the use of nitroglycerin has been found to increase proximal
coronary artery diameters by 12-21%
[41]. However, the added value
on diagnostic accuracy is not clear yet.
Using segmental reconstruction instead of half-scan
reconstruction—The single-segment approach (i.e., half-scan
reconstruction) and the two or more segment approach (i.e., multisegment
reconstruction) are the two image reconstruction algorithms used for low and
higher heart rates, respectively. With half-scan reconstruction, data obtained
from a single 180° gantry rotation are used for image reconstruction
[36]. With multisegment
reconstruction, data of two or more successive cardiac cycles are combined
that cover, as separate segments, 180° acquisition. Multisegment
reconstruction algorithms require a stable and predictable heart rate during
image acquisition. The temporal resolution is improved by a factor 2n
(n = number of cycles and segments) of the rotation time
[36]. For 64-MDCT with 330
milliseconds rotation time, it was found that image quality achieved with
two-segment reconstruction was not significantly improved compared with
half-scan reconstruction for heart rates exceeding 65 bmp, although in 65% of
patients the best overall image quality was achieved by two-segment
reconstruction [13].

View larger version (73K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 5A —69-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Images
show poor contrast enhancement. Contrast timing was good because coronary
arteries were already enhancing. Note poor enhancement of left ventricle (LV),
which should be brightly enhanced (B) (compare with
Fig. 4). Also note stent in
circumflex coronary artery (A and C), where artery is moderately
enhanced. Patient performed Valsalva maneuver during image acquisition that is
recognized by contrast column with convex shape toward superior vena cava (SVC
on coronal image, D), whereas saline flush should be running through at
this time point. High intrathoracic pressure during Valsalva maneuver hampers
inflow in right atrium and causes poor contrast enhancement. Mean heart rate
was 77 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 776
and 789 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (144K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 5B —69-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Images
show poor contrast enhancement. Contrast timing was good because coronary
arteries were already enhancing. Note poor enhancement of left ventricle (LV),
which should be brightly enhanced (B) (compare with
Fig. 4). Also note stent in
circumflex coronary artery (A and C), where artery is moderately
enhanced. Patient performed Valsalva maneuver during image acquisition that is
recognized by contrast column with convex shape toward superior vena cava (SVC
on coronal image, D), whereas saline flush should be running through at
this time point. High intrathoracic pressure during Valsalva maneuver hampers
inflow in right atrium and causes poor contrast enhancement. Mean heart rate
was 77 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 776
and 789 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (133K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 5C —69-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Images
show poor contrast enhancement. Contrast timing was good because coronary
arteries were already enhancing. Note poor enhancement of left ventricle (LV),
which should be brightly enhanced (B) (compare with
Fig. 4). Also note stent in
circumflex coronary artery (A and C), where artery is moderately
enhanced. Patient performed Valsalva maneuver during image acquisition that is
recognized by contrast column with convex shape toward superior vena cava (SVC
on coronal image, D), whereas saline flush should be running through at
this time point. High intrathoracic pressure during Valsalva maneuver hampers
inflow in right atrium and causes poor contrast enhancement. Mean heart rate
was 77 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 776
and 789 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (139K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 5D —69-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Images
show poor contrast enhancement. Contrast timing was good because coronary
arteries were already enhancing. Note poor enhancement of left ventricle (LV),
which should be brightly enhanced (B) (compare with
Fig. 4). Also note stent in
circumflex coronary artery (A and C), where artery is moderately
enhanced. Patient performed Valsalva maneuver during image acquisition that is
recognized by contrast column with convex shape toward superior vena cava (SVC
on coronal image, D), whereas saline flush should be running through at
this time point. High intrathoracic pressure during Valsalva maneuver hampers
inflow in right atrium and causes poor contrast enhancement. Mean heart rate
was 77 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 776
and 789 milliseconds.
|
|
Dual or multiple-source CT scanners in combination with half-scan
reconstruction algorithms—A new technology, the dual-source MDCT
technique has recently been introduced with two tubes mounted at an angle of
90°, thus improving the temporal resolution by a factor 2. A rotation time
of 330 milliseconds results in a temporal resolution of 83 milliseconds by
half-scan reconstruction; this is achieved independently of heart rate
[42]. Development of scanners
with more than two source/detector combinations may further improve temporal
resolution.
Faster scanning with 256-MDCT volumetric scanners—With these
next generation volumetric MDCT scanners
[43,
44], the entire heart can be
covered in only one half rotation. This is expected to eliminate interbeat
(stairstep) artifacts, and a short scanning time of 175 milliseconds
(half-scan, prospective triggering) minimizes the breath-holding time,
allowing almost all patients to breath-hold during image acquisition.
Moreover, multisegment reconstruction—for example, two-segment
reconstruction—may potentially be used to improve the acquisition
time.
Respiratory Motion
Breath-holding exercises and instructions to the patients are particularly
important in avoiding motion artifacts by breathing and postural motions that
cause blurring. With the current 64-MDCT scanners, most patients can
breath-hold for the 10- to 13-second scanning duration. We instruct the
patients to hold their breath after breathing in, at approximately three
quarters of their maximum, and to lie still without pressing in order to avoid
a Valsalva maneuver that may result not only in breathing artifacts but also
in poor contrast enhancement (Fig.
5A,
5B,
5C,
5D). Respiratory motion is
well recognized at the lung window setting.
Noise
CT noise (quantum mottle) is determined primarily by the number of photons
used to make an image. The quantum mottle fraction decreases as the number of
photons increases. CT noise is generally reduced by increasing the kVp, mA, or
scanning time. CT noise is also reduced by increasing voxel size (i.e., by
decreasing the matrix size), increasing reconstructed field of view, by
increasing section thickness
[45], or by image
stacking.
Contrast is the difference in Hounsfield values between tissues and tends
to increase as kVp decreases but is less affected by mA or scanning time. CT
contrast can be improved by administering an iodinated contrast agent. The
displayed image contrast is primarily determined by the CT window-width and
window-level settings
[45].
Larger chest sizes (obesity) are associated with a higher level of image
noise that negatively affects the quality of MDCT coronary angiograms
[12]. Inadequate contrast
administration (e.g., inadequate volume, injection speed, or timing),
inadequate selection of the field of view or region-of-interest placement for
bolus tracking, or inadequate breath-holds can result in low contrast-to-noise
ratios, resulting in poorly visualized coronary arteries. Contrast media with
higher iodine concentrations provide substantially higher attenuation values
in the coronary arteries [46],
although the added value of these higher-iodine-concentration media on
diagnostic accuracy in assessing coronary artery disease has not yet been
established. Artifacts on the right coronary artery due to high contrast
density in the right atrium can be effectively reduced using a saline flush.
However, the diagnostic accuracy in detecting coronary artery stenoses has not
been found to be substantially different between uni- or biphasic contrast
protocols with or without a saline flush
[47]. Probably, the contrast
dose and injection speed should be balanced for optimal enhancement. Testing
the IV access before contrast administration is advisable and is best
performed just before coronary MDCT by flushing a saline bolus with the
patient's arms up in the same position as during coronary artery scanning.

View larger version (155K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 6A —60-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Geometric
distortion due to spiral acquisition, where black "shadow" or
"rod" artifact next to contrast-filled right coronary artery is
due to miscalculation by reconstruction algorithm. During spiral acquisition,
position registered by each view shifts. Miscalculation may cause hypodense
artifacts (arrows) that rotate around high-density contrast-filled
coronary artery. Note change in artifact position from A to C
that is also observed on corresponding levels at coronal reconstruction
(D). Mean heart rate was 66 beats per minute. R-R interval during
acquisition varied between 916 and 977 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (155K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 6B —60-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Geometric
distortion due to spiral acquisition, where black "shadow" or
"rod" artifact next to contrast-filled right coronary artery is
due to miscalculation by reconstruction algorithm. During spiral acquisition,
position registered by each view shifts. Miscalculation may cause hypodense
artifacts (arrows) that rotate around high-density contrast-filled
coronary artery. Note change in artifact position from A to C
that is also observed on corresponding levels at coronal reconstruction
(D). Mean heart rate was 66 beats per minute. R-R interval during
acquisition varied between 916 and 977 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (163K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 6C —60-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Geometric
distortion due to spiral acquisition, where black "shadow" or
"rod" artifact next to contrast-filled right coronary artery is
due to miscalculation by reconstruction algorithm. During spiral acquisition,
position registered by each view shifts. Miscalculation may cause hypodense
artifacts (arrows) that rotate around high-density contrast-filled
coronary artery. Note change in artifact position from A to C
that is also observed on corresponding levels at coronal reconstruction
(D). Mean heart rate was 66 beats per minute. R-R interval during
acquisition varied between 916 and 977 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (152K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 6D —60-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Geometric
distortion due to spiral acquisition, where black "shadow" or
"rod" artifact next to contrast-filled right coronary artery is
due to miscalculation by reconstruction algorithm. During spiral acquisition,
position registered by each view shifts. Miscalculation may cause hypodense
artifacts (arrows) that rotate around high-density contrast-filled
coronary artery. Note change in artifact position from A to C
that is also observed on corresponding levels at coronal reconstruction
(D). Mean heart rate was 66 beats per minute. R-R interval during
acquisition varied between 916 and 977 milliseconds.
|
|
Reconstruction Algorithm
Spiral acquisitions may cause artifacts due to suboptimal (large) pitch,
which is due to table movement during data acquisition that causes subsequent
projections to be acquired from slightly different parts of the object.
Resulting inconsistency in the data causes artifacts that increase with pitch.
General CT artifacts due to spiral scanning in relation to pitch are cone and
rod artifacts [48]. With the
current generation of MDCT scanners, cone artifacts are avoided by various
dedicated MDCT reconstruction approaches that account for cone-beam geometry
[36]. Rod artifacts
[48]—also referred to as
"windmill" artifacts
[36]—are caused by the
spiral-interpolation process of high-contrast structures that are obliquely
oriented along the z-axis scanning plane. During scanning, the
position registered by each view shifts; the size of the shift depends on the
structure's angulation and the table increment. Rod artifacts occur as
hypodense (or hyperdense) structures around structures with high (or low)
density. These helical CT artifacts are often observed around the ribs, where
hypodense artifacts rotate around dense ribs and are seen when scrolling
through a stack of images [36,
42]. Because of the shape, the
position, and the high contrast density of the coronary arteries, rod
artifacts may occur in coronary MDCT angiography as well (Fig.
6A,
6B,
6C,
6D), and these artifacts may
hamper coronary artery evaluation. These artifacts should be recognized and
not be confused with noncalcified coronary plaque.
To reduce spiral interpolation artifacts, narrow collimation that improves
the z-axis resolution should be used
[36]. One may expect these
spiral CT artifacts to disappear with the introduction of newer generation
(256-row) scanners in which acquisition of the entire cardiac volume will be
obtained without table movement.
Beam-hardening artifacts are caused by the polychromatic nature of the
X-ray beam. As the lower energy photons are preferentially absorbed, the beam
becomes more penetrating, which results in lower computed attenuation
coefficient Hounsfield values. Beam-hardening artifacts are most prominent at
high-contrast interfaces [45].
In cardiac imaging, high-density contrast agent injection can manifest as
beam-hardening artifacts by causing dark bands between dense objects in the
image [17].
Metal objects can cause complicated artifacts, such as beam hardening and
partial volume, that are worsened with object motion, and methods to overcome
metal-induced artifacts are particularly difficult to design
[17]. In MDCT coronary
angiography, these artifacts may occur with stents, pacemakers, or surgical
clips. If the density of highly attenuating metal objects is beyond the normal
range that can be handled by the computer, severe streaking artifacts occur
[19] (Fig.
7A,
7B,
7C,
7D). Sharp high-resolution
kernels may be used for improved stent-lumen visualization
[49], although sharp kernel
filters result in higher image noise and artifacts causing lower in-stent
attenuation values [50]. The
diagnostic effect of high-resolution kernels on accuracy in evaluating stent
patency in patients has not been investigated yet.

View larger version (98K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 7A —Two patients with suspected coronary artery disease. 34-year-old man
with pacemaker lead in right atrium (B) that causes subtle artifacts
visible at right ventricular surface in 3D view (arrows, A)
and through right coronary artery central luminal line reconstruction
(arrow, B). Mean heart rate was 78 beats per minute. R-R
interval during acquisition varied between 759 and 790 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (110K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 7B —Two patients with suspected coronary artery disease. 34-year-old man
with pacemaker lead in right atrium (B) that causes subtle artifacts
visible at right ventricular surface in 3D view (arrows, A)
and through right coronary artery central luminal line reconstruction
(arrow, B). Mean heart rate was 78 beats per minute. R-R
interval during acquisition varied between 759 and 790 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (93K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 7C —Two patients with suspected coronary artery disease. 57-year-old man
after bypass surgery with metallic sternal wires (C). Severe
high-density surgical clip artifacts hamper arterial lumen evaluation at
course of left internal mammary artery, which was used for bypassing left
anterior descending coronary artery (D). Surgical clips were used for
occluding side branches of left internal mammary artery. Mean heart rate was
74 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 760 and
835 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (103K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 7D —Two patients with suspected coronary artery disease. 57-year-old man
after bypass surgery with metallic sternal wires (C). Severe
high-density surgical clip artifacts hamper arterial lumen evaluation at
course of left internal mammary artery, which was used for bypassing left
anterior descending coronary artery (D). Surgical clips were used for
occluding side branches of left internal mammary artery. Mean heart rate was
74 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between 760 and
835 milliseconds.
|
|
Reconstruction and Postprocessing Errors
Errors during reconstruction can occur because of inadequate or
insufficient phase selection for coronary artery evaluation. Multiple-phase
reconstructions may be needed for visualizing all coronary artery segments
with diagnostic quality (Fig.
8A,
8B,
8C,
8D). At the workstation,
automatic tools for segmentation may produce errors (Fig.
9A,
9B,
9C). It is important to always
review the nonpostprocessed source images to confirm findings found at the
computer-assisted reconstructions.

View larger version (140K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 8A —77-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Curved
multiplanar reconstruction of right coronary artery in two perpendicular
longitudinal directions. At time point with least motion at 900 milliseconds
(at 76% of R-R interval, A and B), right coronary artery is
sharply delineated in proximal part but appears interrupted halfway
(arrow), whereas further coronary artery segment appears blurred.
Severe stenosis cannot be excluded at this time. Additional reconstruction at
500 milliseconds (at 42% of R-R interval, C and D) is of
moderate but diagnostic quality and shows that suspected right coronary artery
segment is actually open. Mean heart rate was 51 beats per minute. R-R
interval during acquisition varied between 1,155 and 1,198 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (129K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 8B —77-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Curved
multiplanar reconstruction of right coronary artery in two perpendicular
longitudinal directions. At time point with least motion at 900 milliseconds
(at 76% of R-R interval, A and B), right coronary artery is
sharply delineated in proximal part but appears interrupted halfway
(arrow), whereas further coronary artery segment appears blurred.
Severe stenosis cannot be excluded at this time. Additional reconstruction at
500 milliseconds (at 42% of R-R interval, C and D) is of
moderate but diagnostic quality and shows that suspected right coronary artery
segment is actually open. Mean heart rate was 51 beats per minute. R-R
interval during acquisition varied between 1,155 and 1,198 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (128K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 8C —77-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Curved
multiplanar reconstruction of right coronary artery in two perpendicular
longitudinal directions. At time point with least motion at 900 milliseconds
(at 76% of R-R interval, A and B), right coronary artery is
sharply delineated in proximal part but appears interrupted halfway
(arrow), whereas further coronary artery segment appears blurred.
Severe stenosis cannot be excluded at this time. Additional reconstruction at
500 milliseconds (at 42% of R-R interval, C and D) is of
moderate but diagnostic quality and shows that suspected right coronary artery
segment is actually open. Mean heart rate was 51 beats per minute. R-R
interval during acquisition varied between 1,155 and 1,198 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (130K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 8D —77-year-old woman with suspected coronary artery disease. Curved
multiplanar reconstruction of right coronary artery in two perpendicular
longitudinal directions. At time point with least motion at 900 milliseconds
(at 76% of R-R interval, A and B), right coronary artery is
sharply delineated in proximal part but appears interrupted halfway
(arrow), whereas further coronary artery segment appears blurred.
Severe stenosis cannot be excluded at this time. Additional reconstruction at
500 milliseconds (at 42% of R-R interval, C and D) is of
moderate but diagnostic quality and shows that suspected right coronary artery
segment is actually open. Mean heart rate was 51 beats per minute. R-R
interval during acquisition varied between 1,155 and 1,198 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (90K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 9A —51-year-old man with suspected coronary artery disease. Automatic
segmentation reconstruction artifact with interruption and apparent stenosis
of right coronary artery (RCA) at crux where it diverges into RCA continuation
in atrioventricular groove and in posterior descending branch (PD). Point of
interruption is where central luminal line (dotted line, A)
has lost its way at crux and is not in center of coronary artery (A).
This is easily repaired by manually replacing erroneous point (A)
correctly in central lumen at curved multiplanar reconstruction. After
replacement, artery is continuous; compare B and C. Mean heart
rate was 52 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between
1,124 and 1,172 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (116K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 9B —51-year-old man with suspected coronary artery disease. Automatic
segmentation reconstruction artifact with interruption and apparent stenosis
of right coronary artery (RCA) at crux where it diverges into RCA continuation
in atrioventricular groove and in posterior descending branch (PD). Point of
interruption is where central luminal line (dotted line, A)
has lost its way at crux and is not in center of coronary artery (A).
This is easily repaired by manually replacing erroneous point (A)
correctly in central lumen at curved multiplanar reconstruction. After
replacement, artery is continuous; compare B and C. Mean heart
rate was 52 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between
1,124 and 1,172 milliseconds.
|
|

View larger version (125K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
[as a PowerPoint slide]
|
Fig. 9C —51-year-old man with suspected coronary artery disease. Automatic
segmentation reconstruction artifact with interruption and apparent stenosis
of right coronary artery (RCA) at crux where it diverges into RCA continuation
in atrioventricular groove and in posterior descending branch (PD). Point of
interruption is where central luminal line (dotted line, A)
has lost its way at crux and is not in center of coronary artery (A).
This is easily repaired by manually replacing erroneous point (A)
correctly in central lumen at curved multiplanar reconstruction. After
replacement, artery is continuous; compare B and C. Mean heart
rate was 52 beats per minute. R-R interval during acquisition varied between
1,124 and 1,172 milliseconds.
|
|
Diagnostic Interpretation Errors
For 64-MDCT, false-positive and false-negative coronary artery
interpretations have been explicitly explained by obvious technical
limitations—that is, image artifacts due to calcifications, motion, and
obesity
[2-6].
This was also the case for 4-MDCT
[21] and 16-MDCT
[10,
11] coronary angiography.
Therefore, missing coronary artery abnormalities seems to be most commonly
related to artifacts and less related to lack of diagnostic perception in the
case of well-trained observers.
Technical errors that can be avoided are often related to patient handling
and postprocessing handling. Suggestions for avoiding MDCT coronary
angiography artifacts are presented in
Table 1. Global measures are
the following:
Patient preparation—Lower the heart rate in patients with
heart rates exceeding 65 bpm by using ß-blockers (if allowed). Obtain a
good ECG signal. Prepare contrast injection and prepare the patient with
breath-holding instructions.
Acquisition—Take care for adequate timing of contrast
injection, and use an adequate dose and injection speed. Provide good
breath-holding instructions.
Postprocessing—Choose the best phase for coronary artery
reconstruction. Review the source images to confirm findings at advanced
workstation reconstructions.
Diagnostic interpretation—Recognize artifacts and report
diagnostic limitations.
Conclusion
The main artifacts that hamper MDCT coronary angiography image
interpretation are motion artifacts that cause blurring and incorrect
diagnoses due to coronary artery calcifications. This article has explored
artifact causes and provided examples. Recognizing artifacts is important in
the diagnostic process.
Acknowledgments
We thank Raoul M.S. Joemai for producing Figure
1A,
1B.
References
- Giesler T, Baum U, Ropers D, et al. Noninvasive visualization of
coronary arteries using contrast-enhanced multidetector CT: influence of heart
rate on image quality and stenosis detection. AJR2002; 179:911
-916[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Mollet NR, Cademartiri F, van Mieghem CAG, et al. High-resolution
spiral computed tomography coronary angiography in patients referred for
diagnostic conventional coronary angiography.
Circulation 2005;112
: 2318-2323[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Leber AW, Knez A, von Ziegler F, et al. Quantification of
obstructive and nonobstructive coronary lesions by 64-slice computed
tomography: a comparative study with quantitative coronary angiography and
intravascular ultrasound. J Am Coll Cardiol2005; 46:147
-154[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Raff GL, Gallagher MJ, O'Neill WW, Goldstein JA. Diagnostic
accuracy of noninvasive coronary angiography using 64-slice spiral computed
tomography. J Am Coll Cardiol 2005;46
: 552-557[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Pugliese F, Mollet NRA, Runza G, et al. Diagnostic accuracy of
non-invasive 64-slice CT coronary angiography in patients with stable angina
pectoris. Eur Radiol 2006;16
: 575-582[CrossRef][Medline]
- Leschka S, Alkadhi H, Plass A, et al. Accuracy of MSCT coronary
angiography with 64-slice technology: first experience. Eur Heart
J 2005; 26:1482
-1487[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Ropers D, Rixe J, Anders K, et al. Usefulness of multidetector row
spiral computed tomography with 64-x 0.6-mm collimation and 330-ms rotation
for the non-invasive detection of significant coronary artery stenoses.
Am J Cardiol 2006;97
: 343-348[CrossRef][Medline]
- Nikolaou K, Knez A, Rist C, et al. Accuracy of 64-MDCT in the
diagnosis of ischemic heart disease. AJR2006; 187:111
-117[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Hendel RC, Patel MR, Kramer CM, Poon M.
ACCF/ARC/SCCT/SCMR/ASNC/NASCI/SCAI/SIR 2006 appropriateness criteria for
cardiac computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging: a report
of the American College of Cardiology Foundation Quality Strategic Directions
Committee Appropriateness Criteria Working Group, American College of
Radiology, Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, Society for
Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology,
North American Society for Cardiac Imaging, Society for Cardiovascular
Angiography and Interventions, and Society of Interventional Radiology.
J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48
: 1475-1497[Free Full Text]
- Heuschmid M, Kuettner A, Schroeder S, et al. ECG-gated 16-MDCT of
the coronary arteries: assessment of image quality and accuracy in detecting
stenosis. AJR 2005;184
: 1413-1419[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Garcia MJ, Lessick J, Hoffmann MHK. Accuracy of 16-row
multidetector computed tomography for the assessment of coronary artery
stenosis. JAMA 2006;296
: 403-411[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Ferencik M, Nomura CH, Maurovich-Horvat P, et al. Quantitative
parameters of image quality in 64-slice computed tomography angiography of the
coronary arteries. Eur J Radiol 2006;57
: 373-379[CrossRef][Medline]
- Wintersperger BJ, Nikolaou K, von Ziegler F, et al. Image quality,
motion artifacts, and reconstruction timing of 64-slice coronary computed
tomography angiography with 0.33-second rotation speed. Invest
Radiol 2006; 41:436
-442[CrossRef][Medline]
- Pannu HK, Jacobs JE, Lai S, Fishman EK. Coronary CT angiography
with 64-MDCT: assessment of vessel visibility. AJR2006; 187:119
-126[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Leshka S, Husmann L, Desbiolles LM, et al. Optimal image
reconstruction intervals for non-invasive coronary angiography with 64-slice
CT. Eur Radiol 2006;16
: 1964-1972[CrossRef][Medline]
- Mühlenbruch G, Seyfarth T, Soo CS, Pregalathan N, Mahnken AH.
Diagnostic value of 64-slice multi-detector row cardiac CTA in symptomatic
patients. Eur Radiol 2007;17
: 603-609[CrossRef][Medline]
- Hsieh J. Image artifacts: appearances, causes, and corrections. In:
Computed tomography: principles, design, artifacts, and recent
advances. Bellingham, WA: SPIE Press, 2003:167
-240
- Geleijns J, Kroft LJM, Bax JJ, Lamb HJ, de Roos A. Techniques for
cardiovascular computed tomography. In: Higgins CB, de Roos A, eds.
MRI and CT of the cardiovascular system, 2nd ed.
Philadelphia, PA: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2006:37
-52
- Barrett J, Keat N. Artifacts in CT: recognition and avoidance.
RadioGraphics 2004;24
: 1679-1691[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Hong C, Becker CR, Huber A, et al. ECG-gated reconstructed
multi-detector row CT coronary angiography: effect of varying trigger delay on
image quality. Radiology 2001;220
: 712-717[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Nieman K, Rensing BJ, van Geuns RJM, et al. Noninvasive coronary
angiography with multislice spiral computed tomography: impact of heart rate.
Heart 2002; 88:470
-474[Abstract/Free Full Text]
- Dirksen MS, Jukema JW, Bax JJ, at al. Cardiac multidetector-row
computed tomography in patients with unstable angina. Am J
Cardiol 2005; 95:457
-461[CrossRef][Medline]
- Dewey M, Laule M, Krug L, et al. Multisegment and half-scan
reconstruction of 16-slice computed tomography for detection of coronary
artery stenoses. Invest Radiol 2004;39
: 223-229[CrossRef][Medline]
- Kantarci M, Ceviz N, Durur I, et al. Effect of the reconstruction
window obtained at isovolumetric relaxation period on the image quality in
electrocardiographic-gated 16-multidetector-row computed tomography coronary
angiography studies. J Comput Assist Tomogr2006; 30:258
-261[CrossRef][Medline]
- Hoffmann MHK, Lessick J, Manzke R, et al. Automatic determination
of minimal cardiac motion phases for computed tomography imaging: initial
experience. Eur Radiol 2006;16
: 365-373[CrossRef][Medline]
- Hsieh J. Helical or spiral CT. In: Computed tomography:
principles, design, artifacts, and recent advances. Bellingham,
WA: SPIE Press, 2003:265
-305