Suitability of temporal bone acoustic window: conventional TCD versus transcranial color-coded duplex sonography.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-1-2007
Abstract
PURPOSE AND BACKGROUND: To determine whether the proportion of patients with suitable temporal bone acoustic windows is different for conventional transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) and transcranial color-coded duplex sonography (TCCS), based on a head-to-head comparison in the same population of patients.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Ninety patients, age 22-88 years (mean 57.1 +/- 11.7 years), 46 women and 44 men, 66 Caucasian, 19 African-American, and five Hispanic, underwent routine conventional TCD and the TCCS examination close in time to each other. Suitability of temporal bone acoustic window was defined by ability to insonate the middle and posterior and/or anterior cerebral arteries, while partial suitability was defined by ability to detect the posterior cerebral artery but not the middle cerebral artery. To compare proportions of suitable temporal bone windows for both sonographic methods, exact sign test by Liddell was used.
RESULTS: Bilateral absence of temporal bone acoustic window was reported in six patients when studied with both conventional TCD and TCCS, whereas at least unilateral absence was reported in 10 patients. Partial, at least unilateral, suitability was reported in 11 patients with conventional TCD, and in 7 with TCCS. All differences in proportions were not significant (two-sided P>0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that success rate of insonating the intracranial vessels through the temporal bone acoustic window is the same for conventional TCD and imaging TCCS.
Volume
17
Issue
4
First Page
311
Last Page
314
ISSN
1051-2284
Published In/Presented At
Krejza, J., Swiat, M., Pawlak, M. A., Oszkinis, G., Weigele, J., Hurst, R. W., & Kasner, S. (2007). Suitability of temporal bone acoustic window: conventional TCD versus transcranial color-coded duplex sonography. Journal of neuroimaging : official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging, 17(4), 311–314. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1552-6569.2007.00117.x
Disciplines
Diagnosis | Medicine and Health Sciences | Other Analytical, Diagnostic and Therapeutic Techniques and Equipment | Radiology
PubMedID
17894619
Department(s)
Department of Radiology and Diagnostic Medical Imaging
Document Type
Article