The extent of coronary artery disease has been shown to be an important indicator of prognosis. Cardiac computed tomography (CT) has the ability to measure plaque, with both coronary artery calcium scanning and CT angiography (CTA), to give a measure of total atheroma burden. Beyond assessing stenosis and atherosclerosis, CTA can assess high-risk plaque.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors describe a complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) and discuss its type according to the presence or absence of nerve injury. A patient underwent thromboendarterectomy of the right popliteal artery. Subsequently, right lower limb reflex sympathetic dystrophy developed, which was confirmed by scintigraphy and responded well to calcitonin treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSubmaximal exercise tests have been advocated to assess exercise capacity in chronic heart failure, but hemodynamic responses have not been characterized. To determine left ventricular (LV) responses during submaximal exercise, the LV ejection fraction (EF) and volumes were evaluated by using an ambulatory radionuclide detector in 13 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy during upright maximal graded bicycle exercise, stair climbing and a 6-minute walk test. The 3 tests elicited different responses in volumes and, to a lesser degree, in LVEF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The aim of this study was to assess whether, after anterior myocardial infarction, ST segment changes during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) of the left anterior descending coronary artery correlated with the amount of ischemic myocardium in the area at risk, measured with 99mTc-labeled sestamibi single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) during balloon inflation.
Methods And Results: Quantitative continuous monitoring of the ST segment was performed during PTCA of the left anterior descending coronary artery in 11 patients, and corresponding SPECT imaging was compared with a rest acquisition performed before PTCA. SPECT was quantified by a bull's-eye analysis according to main criteria: (1) the planimetered defect size during PTCA as an indicator of the size of the area at risk, (2) the change in the pathologic/normal area count ratio in the area at risk as an index of the severity of ischemia, and (3) the difference between the size of the defect during PTCA and at baseline.
Clinical, electrocardiographic, and thallium-201 single-photon emission computed tomography data were evaluated in 397 consecutive patients divided into 3 groups according to coronary hyperemic stimulation: 186 patients (group I; Ex) had maximal symptom-limited exercise ergometric stress testing, 93 patients (group II; Dip) had intravenous dipyridamole (0.7 to 0.8 mg/kg) stress testing, and 118 patients (group III; Dip+Ex) had dipyridamole (0.
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