4.7 Article

Spectral CT of carotid atherosclerotic plaque: comparison with histology

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 12, Pages 2581-2588

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-012-2538-7

Keywords

Carotid artery diseases; Plaque; Atherosclerotic; X-Ray microtomography; MARS-CT; Spectral CT

Funding

  1. NZ National Heart Foundation [1414]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology through FRST [PROJ-13860-NMTS-UOC]

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Objective To distinguish components of vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque by imaging their energy response using spectral CT and comparing images with histology. Methods After spectroscopic calibration using phantoms of plaque surrogates, excised human carotid atherosclerotic plaques were imaged using MARS CT using a photon-processing detector with a silicon sensor layer and microfocus X-ray tube (50 kVp, 0.5 mA) at 38-mu m voxel size. The plaques were imaged, sectioned and re-imaged using four threshold energies: 10, 16, 22 and 28 keV; then sequentially stained with modified Von Kossa, Perl's Prussian blue and Oil-Red O, and photographed. Relative Hounsfield units across the energies were entered into a linear algebraic material decomposition model to identify the unknown plaque components. Results Lipid, calcium, iron and water-like components of plaque have distinguishable energy responses to X-ray, visible on spectral CT images. CT images of the plaque surface correlated very well with histological photographs. Calcium deposits (> 1,000 mu m) in plaque are larger than iron deposits (< 100 mu m), but could not be distinguished from each other within the same voxel using the energy range available. Conclustions Spectral CT displays energy information in image form at high spatial resolution, enhancing the intrinsic contrast of lipid, calcium and iron within atheroma. Key Points . Spectral computed tomography offers new insights into tissue characterisation. . Components of vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque are spectrally distinct with intrinsic contrast. . Spectral CT of excised atherosclerotic plaques can display iron, calcium and lipid. . Calcium deposits are larger than iron deposits in atheroma. . Spectral CT may help in the non-invasive detection of vulnerable plaques.

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