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The Role of Multimodality Imaging (CT & MR) as a Guide to the Management of Chronic Coronary Syndromes.

Authors :
Tassetti, Luigi
Sfriso, Enrico
Torlone, Francesco
Baggiano, Andrea
Mushtaq, Saima
Cannata, Francesco
Del Torto, Alberico
Fazzari, Fabio
Fusini, Laura
Junod, Daniele
Maragna, Riccardo
Volpe, Alessandra
Carrabba, Nazario
Conte, Edoardo
Guglielmo, Marco
La Mura, Lucia
Pergola, Valeria
Pedrinelli, Roberto
Indolfi, Ciro
Sinagra, Gianfranco
Source :
Journal of Clinical Medicine; Jun2024, Vol. 13 Issue 12, p3450, 23p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) is one of the leading cardiovascular causes of morbidity, mortality, and use of medical resources. After the introduction by international guidelines of the same level of recommendation to non-invasive imaging techniques in CCS evaluation, a large debate arose about the dilemma of choosing anatomical (with coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA)) or functional imaging (with stress echocardiography (SE), cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), or nuclear imaging techniques) as a first diagnostic evaluation. The determinant role of the atherosclerotic burden in defining cardiovascular risk and prognosis more than myocardial inducible ischemia has progressively increased the use of a first anatomical evaluation with CCTA in a wide range of pre-test probability in CCS patients. Functional testing holds importance, both because the role of revascularization in symptomatic patients with proven ischemia is well defined and because functional imaging, particularly with stress cardiac magnetic resonance (s-CMR), gives further prognostic information regarding LV function, detection of myocardial viability, and tissue characterization. Emerging techniques such as stress computed tomography perfusion (s-CTP) and fractional flow reserve derived from CT (FFRCT), combining anatomical and functional evaluation, appear capable of addressing the need for a single non-invasive examination, especially in patients with high risk or previous revascularization. Furthermore, CCTA in peri-procedural planning is promising to acquire greater importance in the non-invasive planning and guiding of complex coronary revascularization procedures, both by defining the correct strategy of interventional procedure and by improving patient selection. This review explores the different roles of non-invasive imaging techniques in managing CCS patients, also providing insights into preoperative planning for percutaneous or surgical myocardial revascularization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20770383
Volume :
13
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178191963
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13123450