Background: The safety of ergonovine/ergometrine stress testing for coronary vasospasm when performed outside the cath lab has vigorously been questioned. The aim of this study was to assess the value of ergonovine/ergometrine stress testing performed in the echo lab.

Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the data prospectively collected in the echo lab of the Institute of Clinical Physiology of Pisa (Italy) from January 1, 1985, to October 1, 1998, on 478 tests performed on 464 patients with either ergonovine or ergometrine stress echo testing. By selection, all patients had history of chest pain, consistent with vasospastic angina, negative or ambiguous exercise stress testing, and normal or near normal resting left ventricular function. Ergonovine or ergometrine maleate was injected up to a total cumulative dosage of 0.35 mg, under continuous 12 lead ECG and two-dimensional echo monitoring.

Results: There were no death, myocardial infarction, ventricular fibrillation or III degree atrioventricular block. One patient had non-sustained ventricular tachycardia associated with transient ST segment elevation 30 min after the test. Two patients had II degree atrioventricular block, associated with positive echocardiography test and promptly reversed by nitrate administration. Transient regional myocardial dysfunction occurred in 74 patients (15%). Limiting ischemia-independent side effects were present in 13 patients (3%): hypotension in 1, arterial hypertension in 5, nonsustained ventricular tachycardia in 2, and nausea/vomiting in 5. The overall feasibility was 97%.

Conclusions: Pharmacological stress echocardiography with either ergonovine or ergometrine is highly feasible and can be safely performed in the echo lab in properly selected patients in whom coronary vasospasm is suspected. It is often the only way to document coronary vasospasm otherwise missed by conventional noninvasive stress test and even by coronary angiography.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

echo lab
12
stress testing
12
coronary vasospasm
12
ergonovine ergometrine
12
stress echocardiography
8
478 tests
8
464 patients
8
ergonovine/ergometrine stress
8
performed echo
8
degree atrioventricular
8

Similar Publications

Background: Multifrequency MR elastography (mMRE) enables noninvasive quantification of renal stiffness in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Manual segmentation of the kidneys on mMRE is time-consuming and prone to increased interobserver variability.

Purpose: To evaluate the performance of mMRE combined with automatic segmentation in assessing CKD severity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: MRI offers quantification of proton density fat fraction (PDFF) and tissue characteristics with T1 mapping. The influence of age, sex, and the potential confounding effects of fat on T1 values in skeletal muscle in healthy adults are insufficiently known.

Purpose: To determine the accuracy and repeatability of a saturation-recovery chemical-shift encoded multiparametric approach (SR-CSE) for quantification of T1 and muscle fat content, and establish normative values (age, sex) from a healthy cohort.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Intra-pancreatic fat deposition (IPFD) is closely associated with the onset and progression of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). We aimed to develop an accurate and automated method for assessing IPFD on multi-echo Dixon MRI.

Materials And Methods: In this retrospective study, 534 patients from two centers who underwent upper abdomen MRI and completed multi-echo and double-echo Dixon MRI were included.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chemical shift encoding based double bonds quantification in triglycerides using deep image prior.

Quant Imaging Med Surg

January 2025

Department of Imaging and Interventional Radiology, Prince of Wales Hospital, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.

Fatty acid can potentially serve as biomarker for evaluating metabolic disorder and inflammation condition, and quantifying the double bonds is the key for revealing fatty acid information. This study presents an assessment of a deep learning approach utilizing deep image prior (DIP) for the quantification of double bonds and methylene-interrupted double bonds of triglyceride derived from chemical-shift encoded multi-echo gradient echo images, all achieved without the necessity for network training. The methodology implemented a cost function grounded in signal constraints to continually refine the neural network's parameters on a single slice of images through iterative processes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of the spinal cord is relevant for studying sensation, movement, and autonomic function. Preprocessing of spinal cord fMRI data involves segmentation of the spinal cord on gradient-echo echo planar imaging (EPI) images. Current automated segmentation methods do not work well on these data, due to the low spatial resolution, susceptibility artifacts causing distortions and signal drop-out, ghosting, and motion-related artifacts.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!