Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- PART I PLAIN RADIOGRAPHY
- PART II ULTRASOUND
- PART III COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY
- 28 CT in the ED: Special Considerations
- 29 CT of the Spine
- 30 CT Imaging of the Head
- 31 CT Imaging of the Face
- 32 CT of the Chest
- 33 CT of the Abdomen and Pelvis
- 34 CT Angiography of the Chest
- 35 CT Angiography of the Abdominal Vasculature
- 36 CT Angiography of the Head and Neck
- 37 CT Angiography of the Extremities
- PART IV MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
- Index
- Plate Section
37 - CT Angiography of the Extremities
from PART III - COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- PART I PLAIN RADIOGRAPHY
- PART II ULTRASOUND
- PART III COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY
- 28 CT in the ED: Special Considerations
- 29 CT of the Spine
- 30 CT Imaging of the Head
- 31 CT Imaging of the Face
- 32 CT of the Chest
- 33 CT of the Abdomen and Pelvis
- 34 CT Angiography of the Chest
- 35 CT Angiography of the Abdominal Vasculature
- 36 CT Angiography of the Head and Neck
- 37 CT Angiography of the Extremities
- PART IV MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
- Index
- Plate Section
Summary
CT angiography (CTA) (1) and magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) are used instead of conventional angiography for many cases requiring evaluation of the blood vessels. Advantages of CTA compared with conventional angiography include the avoidance of arterial puncture, reduced radiation exposure, and reduced contrast load, with less resultant risk of renal toxicity (2). CTA is often more convenient for emergent evaluation because it does not require mobilization of the interventional radiography team. It is usually more readily available than MRA and avoids the monitoring limitations of the MRI suite. This chapter discusses the indications, diagnostic capabilities, and limitations of CTA of the upper and lower extremities, followed by images of important pathological findings.
INDICATIONS
CTA, like conventional angiography, should be performed after traumatic injuries in patients whose injured extremity is pulseless, has a neurological deficit, has an expanding hematoma, or has a bruit or thrill (3). It may also be required in penetrating trauma where the path of injury lies near an important vessel, with limb color or temperature change, or in blunt trauma with a suspicious mechanism, such as knee dislocations. Nontraumatic indications include patients who present with a cool, painful extremity suggestive of acute arterial insufficiency (4), or in suspected arteriovenous fistulas or aneurysms.
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- Information
- Clinical Emergency Radiology , pp. 506 - 514Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008