1. Prognostic value of persistent thallium-201 defects that become reversible after reinjection in patients with chronic myocardial infarction.
- Author
-
Tisselli, Anna, Pieri, Pierluigi, Moscatelli, Giovanni, Agostini, Monica, Nanni, Oriana, Spinelli, Aureliano, Riva, Pietro, Tisselli, A, Pieri, P, Moscatelli, G, Agostini, M, Nanni, O, Spinelli, A, and Riva, P
- Subjects
ANGINA pectoris ,MYOCARDIAL infarction complications ,MYOCARDIAL infarction diagnosis ,MYOCARDIAL infarction treatment ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,EXERCISE tests ,HEART ,LONGITUDINAL method ,LUNGS ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,MYOCARDIAL revascularization ,PROGNOSIS ,RADIONUCLIDE imaging ,RADIOISOTOPES ,THALLIUM isotopes ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: The presence of defects at stress-redistribution thallium-201 scintigraphy is related to a higher risk of cardiac events. However, the prognostic value of defects that become reversible after reinjection is not known. In this study we evaluated the prognostic contribution of stress-redistribution-reinjection with special regard to 3-hour fixed defects that become reversible after reinjection.Methods and Results: We studied 122 patients with chronic myocardial infarction (>2 months) and suspected or known residual ischemia, with stress-redistribution-reinjection planar scintigraphy. Thallium scans were analyzed by three observers (three segments per view, 5-point score) and classified as normal, fixed, and reversible. The lung/heart ratio was also calculated. At a median follow-up of 47 months, 10 patients had hard events (four deaths and six myocardial infarctions) (group I), 12 patients had unstable angina (group II), 12 patients underwent planned coronary artery bypass grafting or percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (group III), and 86 patients had no events (group IV). The presence of fixed defects that became reversible after reinjection did not identify patients at higher risk. The number of reversible defects at 3 hours was significantly higher only in patients who underwent revascularization. Unstable angina was not predicted by any scintigraphic pattern. The variables that were statistically related to hard events by univariate analysis were increased lung uptake, reversible cavity dilation, and the number of fixed defects that remained fixed after reinjection. By Cox multivariate analysis, the strongest predictor of hard events was the presence of more than three fixed defects that remained fixed after reinjection as a marker of irreversible myocardial damage.Conclusions: (201)Tl reinjection is a useful approach for not only detecting viable myocardium but also risk stratification in patients with chronic myocardial infarction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF