AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with suspected coronary artery disease sometimes can't reach the exercise level needed for effective stress testing, prompting the idea of using dipyridamole scintigraphy instead.
  • This study aimed to compare the effectiveness of two testing protocols: exercise alone versus exercise combined with dipyridamole in patients with ischemic heart disease.
  • Results revealed that 25 out of 35 myocardial zones showed greater underperfusion when combining exercise with dipyridamole, indicating a significant difference in the detection of coronary artery issues between the two methods.

Article Abstract

Patients with suspected coronary artery disease are sometimes unable to exercise adequately (85% of age calculated maximal heart rate) to validate their ergometric stress test. Some groups suggest performing dipyridamole scintigraphy from the outset but then the information provided by exercise stress testing is lost. The aim of this study was to compare scintigraphies performed after exercise alone and after exercise combined with dipyridamole using a method of quantification. Thirteen patients with ischaemic heart disease without necrosis (coronary lesions greater than 75% luminal narrowing in: 7 right coronary, 10 left anterior descending, 3 left circumflex arteries and 1 left main coronary artery with 50% luminal narrowing) underwent exercise stress testing followed by Thallium imaging. One week later, the same exercise stress test was performed followed by an intravenous injection of dipyridamole and Thallium scintigraphy. The circumference of the radioactivity was traced and the surface of each segment calculated in three different short axis views, subdivided into 4 segments (anterior, lateral, inferior and septal walls). Any segment vascularised by a stenosed coronary artery was considered to be underperfused (105 segments). The ratios of the surfaces of underperfused/normal segments were compared using the two study protocols. Segments of the same wall in the 3 short axis views were grouped in the same myocardial zone. Thirty five myocardial zones were thus obtained: 25 zones were more underperfused after combining exercise and dipyridamole than after simple exercise stress (p = 0.014). The average increase in underperfusion after the combined exercise-dipyridamole was 12.4% compared with 5.5% after exercise alone (p = 0.03). Secondary effects were minimal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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