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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Computed Tomography of the Human Pineal Gland for Study of the Sleep–Wake Rhythm: Reproducibility of a Semi-Quantitative Approach

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Pages 865-871 | Accepted 20 May 2006, Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Purpose: To propose a semi-quantitative computed tomography (CT) protocol for determining uncalcified pineal tissue (UCPT), and to evaluate its reproducibility in modification of studies showing that the degree of calcification is a potential marker of deficient melatonin production and may prove an instability marker of circadian rhythm.

Material and Methods: Twenty-two pineal gland autopsy specimens were scanned in a skull phantom with different slice thickness twice and the uncalcified tissue visually assessed using a four-point scale. The maximum gland density was measured and its inverse graded on a non-linear four-point scale. The sum of both scores was multiplied by the gland volume to yield the UCPT. The within-subject variance of UCPT was determined and compared between scans of different slice thickness.

Results: The UCPT of the first measurement, in arbitrary units, was 39±52.5 for 1 mm slice thickness, 44±51.1 for 2 mm, 45±34.8 for 4 mm, and 84±58.0 for 8 mm. Significant differences of within-subject variance of UCPT were found between 1 and 4 mm, 1 and 8 mm, and 2 and 8 mm slice thicknesses (P<0.05).

Conclusion: A superior reproducibility of the semi-quantitative CT determination of UCPT was found using 1 and 2 mm slice thicknesses. These data support the use of thin slices of 1 and 2 mm. The benefit in reproducibility from thin slices has to be carefully weighted against their considerably higher radiation exposure.

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