Validation of Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced Ultrasound in Rodent Kidneys as an Absolute Quantitative Method for Measuring Blood Perfusion

Abstract

Contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) has demonstrated utility in the monitoring of blood flow in tissues, organs, and tumors. However, current CEUS methods typically provide only relative image-derived measurements, rather than quantitative values of blood flow in milliliters/minute per gram of tissue. In this study, CEUS derived parameters of blood flow are compared to absolute measurements of blood flow in rodent kidneys. Additionally, the effect of contrast agent infusion rate and transducer orientation on image-derived perfusion measurements are assessed. Both wash-in curve and time-to-refill algorithms are examined. Data illustrate that for all conditions, image-derived flow measurements were well-correlated with transit-time flow probe measurements (R > 0.9). However, we report differences in the sensitivity to flow across different transducer orientations as well as the contrast analysis algorithm utilized. Results also indicate that there exists a range of contrast agent flow rates for which image-derived estimates are consistent

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