1. Left main coronary artery disease: A review of the spectrum of noninvasive diagnostic modalities.
- Author
-
Sareen N and Ananthasubramaniam K
- Subjects
- Evidence-Based Medicine, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Technology Assessment, Biomedical, Coronary Angiography methods, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Echocardiography methods, Image Enhancement methods, Magnetic Resonance Angiography methods, Positron-Emission Tomography methods, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon methods
- Abstract
Medically managed significant left main (LM) stem disease has been considered a determinant of increased cardiac mortality approaching 50% at 3-year follow-up. Despite the clinical significance of LM disease, studies comparing the various diagnostic modalities, especially noninvasive, are sparse. Clinicians, particularly imagers, should be aware of the strengths and weaknesses of existing modalities to diagnose LM disease as integrating many clues (history, symptoms, electrocardiogram, and stress hemodynamics are essential to suspect this diagnosis and proceed to the next step). Here we review the existing data on the current role of electrocardiography, nuclear myocardial perfusion imaging (single photon emission computed tomography and positron emission tomography), stress echocardiography, cardiac computed tomography, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in diagnostic evaluation of LM disease. Wherever applicable we have extended our discussion to multivessel coronary artery disease encompassing scenarios where LMS can present as LM equivalent with or without extensive multivessel coronary artery disease.
- Published
- 2016
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