Purpose: In suspected brain ischemia, the perfusion cerebral computed tomography (cCT) should be performed with the lowest amount of contrast media to avoid a contrast media induced nephropathy (CIN) even if the patient already is in renal failure. We were interested to find the best parameters for this examination.
Material and methods: From February 2000 to March 2003, 138 patients (58 females, 80 males, mean age 66.8 years) underwent cCT-perfusion immediately after the admission to our stroke unit. Of these patients, 62% (n = 86) had normal renal function and 38% (n = 52) renal failure (up to 381 micromol/l basic serum creatinine). We varied volume (20-80 ml), flow (5 vs. 7.2 ml/s) and concentration (270 vs. 320 ml/mg iodine) of a dimer, non-ionic contrast media (Visipaque) to establish 5 groups. So we got patients receiving 6 g, 12 g, 16 g, 19 g and 25 g of iodine. After generating the perfusion maps, two radiologists reviewed the quality of the maps and scored it (1-5). We measured the serum creatinine before contrast application and at follow up cCT (days 3 and 7).
Results: The quality of the maps increases with increasing amount of iodine. However, the diagnostic result was not significantly better using more than about 16 g of iodine (e. g., 60 ml--7.2 ml/s--270 mg/ml) in cCT-perfusion studies. Only one patient had a pathologic increase in serum creatinine (day 1: 93; day 4: 146 micromol/l) but died at day 5 because of massive co-morbidity and septic pneumonia. No CIN occurred even in the patient group with pre-existent renal failure.
Conclusions: About 60 ml contrast media and a moderate flow rate of about 7 ml/s ensure good results in perfusion-cCT, even if the patients have poor blood circulation or arteriosclerosis. The use of a dimer, non-ionic contrast media (range of 6-25 g iodine) seems to minimize the risk of CIN in the daily routine.