In this study the relative importance of visual assessment and quantitative analysis myocardial stress perfusion scintigraphy in 72 patients with a 40% incidence of triple-vessel coronary disease was tested. The quantitative analysis of the uptake scintigram in combination with a washout rate study of thallium-201 was not superior to the visual analysis with regard to the overall detection of significant coronary disease (obstructions of at least 50%). The sensitivity of the quantitative analysis was 0.85 for the entire population and 0.90 for the triple-vessel disease group (specificity 0.90). Detection of jeopardized myocardial flow regions in patients with triple-vessel disease, however, resulted in a significantly better identification by quantitative analysis. Of the 87 jeopardized flow regions in the 29 patients with triple-vessel disease, 62 regions were detected by the quantitative analysis whereas 48 regions were noted by the visual evaluation. The post-test likelihood of this regional quantitative analysis with respect to the triple-vessel disease was 66%. The incidence of global ischemia as detected by washout abnormalities in cases with no or a maximum of one regional uptake defect was 7%.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0167-5273(86)90035-5 | DOI Listing |
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