Relation of myocardial perfusion at rest and during pharmacologic stress to the PET patterns of tissue viability in patients with severe left ventricular dysfunction
Autor: | Jamshid Maddahi, Farbod Asgarzadie, Heinrich R. Schelbert, Richard C. Brunken, Marcelo F. Di Carli, Sepehr Rokhsar |
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Rok vydání: | 1998 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Vasodilator Agents Perfusion scanning Coronary Disease Positron emission tomographic Ventricular Dysfunction Left Ammonia Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 Internal medicine Coronary Circulation medicine Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging In patient Rest (music) Tissue viability Aged Tissue Survival Nitrogen Radioisotopes medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Myocardium Heart Dipyridamole Myocardial Contraction Positron emission tomography Cardiology Female Tomography Radiopharmaceuticals Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine Nuclear medicine business Perfusion Tomography Emission-Computed |
Zdroj: | Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. 5(6) |
ISSN: | 1071-3581 |
Popis: | Stress perfusion imaging can assess effectively the amount of jeopardized myocardium, but its use for identifying underperfused but viable myocardium has yielded variable results. We evaluated the relation between measurements of myocardial perfusion at rest and during pharmacologic stress and the patterns of tissue viability as determined by positron emission tomographic (PET) imaging.We studied 33 patients with coronary artery disease and left ventricular (LV) dysfunction (LV ejection fraction, 30%+/-8%). PET imaging was used to evaluate regional myocardial perfusion at rest and during pharmacologic stress with [13N]-ammonia as a flow tracer, and to delineate patterns of tissue viability (i.e., perfusion-metabolism mismatch or match) using [18F]-deoxyglucose (FDG). We analyzed 429 myocardial regions, of which 229 were dysfunctional at rest. Of these, 30 had normal perfusion and 199 were hypoperfused. A severe resting defect (deficit40% below normal) predicted lack of significant tissue viability; 31 of 35 regions (89%) had a PET match pattern denoting transmural fibrosis. Although regions with mild or moderate resting defects (deficit40% below normal) showed evidence of metabolic activity, perfusion measurements alone failed to identify regions with PET mismatch (reflecting hibernating myocardium). Reversible stress defects were observed with slightly higher frequency in regions with a PET mismatch (10 of 37) than in those with a PET match (36 of 162) pattern of viability. A reversible stress defect was a specific (78%) marker, but was a relatively insensitive marker (27%) of viable myocardium as defined by the PET mismatch pattern.In patients with LV dysfunction, the severity of regional contractile abnormalities correlates with the severity of flow deficit at rest. Severe reductions in resting blood flow in these dysfunctional regions identify predominantly nonviable myocardium that is unlikely to have improved function after revascularization. Although dysfunctional myocardium with mild to moderate flow reductions contains variable amounts of viable tissue (as assessed by FDG uptake), flow measurements alone do not distinguish between regions with PET mismatch (potentially reversible dysfunction) and PET match (irreversible dysfunction). The presence of an irreversible defect on stress imaging is a relatively specific (78%) marker of PET match, whereas a reversible stress defect is a rather insensitive (27%) marker of viability, as defined by the PET mismatch pattern. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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