Issue: Vojnosanit Pregl 2015; Vol. 72 (No. 12)
Importance of angle correction in transcranial color-coded duplex insonation of arteries at the base of the brain
Authors:
Toplica Lepić*, Dragana Veljančić*, Olivera Jovanikić†, Milan Lepić†, Petar Slankamenac‡§, Ranko Raičević*║
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Background/Aim. Transcranial color-coded duplex
(TCCD) sonography allows visualization of the vessels being
examined and measurement of the angle of insonation. The
published literature suggests that blood vessels are insonated
at the angle lower than 30 degrees, hence no correction for
the angle is necessary. The aim of this study was to determine
the availability of intracranial blood vessels for insonation,
and the percentage of arteries and their segments which can
be insonated at the angles lower than 30 degrees. Methods.
The study included 120 patients (mean age 51). For each of
the segments the angle of insonation was registered based on
TCCD vizualization, and hemodynamic parameters were
measured. The angle of insonation was measured using combined
B-mode and color Doppler vizualization, as the angle
between the direction of the ultrasound beam and the axis of
the shown arterial segment. Results. The total success rate of
insonation was 86.33% (1,554 out of 1,800). The mean angle
of insonation value in all the examined arterial segments was
42 degrees. The insonation angle was higher than 30 degrees
in about three quarters of the examined segments, especially
in the A2 segment of the anterior cerebral artery (98%), the
P1 segmet of the posterior cerebral artery (87%) and in the
terminal internal carotid artery (83%). The A1 segment of the
anterior cerebral artery showed the best insonation conditions
with the angle of insonation lower than 30 degrees in 53% of
the cases. Conclusion. The presented results of angles of insonation
measurements for the anterior, middle and posterior
cerebral arteries and their segments, as well as the terminal
portion of the internal carotid artery clearly indicate that their
average values in tested segments were very often higher than
30 degrees, which can cause an error in blood flow velocity
measurement that cannot be ignored. The results confirm the
necessity of correcting flow velocity values on the basis of the
angle of insonation in TCCD sonography.