Back to Search Start Over

Gated technetium-99m sestamibi for simultaneous assessment of stress myocardial perfusion, postexercise regional ventricular function and myocardial viability

Authors :
Terrance Chua
Daniel S. Berman
John D. Friedman
Gerald Maurer
Ken Van Train
Guido Germano
Hosen Kiat
Source :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 23(5):1107-1114
Publication Year :
1994
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1994.

Abstract

Objectives. This study compares technetium-99m sestamibi (sestamibi) electrocardiographic (ECG) gated single-photon emission computed tomography (gated SPECT) and echocardiography for the evaluation of myocardial function and assesses the feasibility of single-injection, single-acquisition stress perfusion/rest function technetium-99m sestamibi-gated SPECT as an alternative to conventional stress/rest imaging for assessment of myocardial perfusion and viability. Background. Simultaneous assessment of stress perfusion and rest function is possible with gated SPECT acquisition of stress-injected technetium-99m sestamibi. Methods. Rest thallium-201 SPECT followed by stress sestamibigated SPECT (acquired 0.5 to 1 h after sestamibi injection) was performed in 58 patients. Echocardiography was performed immediately after or before gated SPECT in 43 of the patients. All studies were analyzed by semiquantitative visual scoring. Sestamibi-gated SPECT studies were read for stress perfusion and rest wall motion and thickening. Reversibility on sestamibi-gated SPECT was defined as the presence of a definite stress defect with normal or mildly impaired wall motion or thickening on gated SPECT. Results. There was high segmental score agreement between gated SPECT and echocardiography for wall motion (91%, kappa = 0.68, p Conclusions. Gated SPECT of stress-injected sestamibi correlates well with echocardiographic assessment of regional function and thus adds information to perfusion SPECT. In patients without previous myocardial infarction, a single-injection stress perfusion/rest function approach using sestamibi-gated SPECT can substitute for conventional stress/rest myocardial perfusion imaging, adding a rest perfusion study only if there are nonreversible defects or consideration of attenuation artifacts. In patients with previous myocardial infarction, the gated SPECT approach does not replace the need for a rest perfusion study.

Details

ISSN :
07351097
Volume :
23
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a637b32475e5218f7b9c70826ef67afe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0735-1097(94)90598-3