SIGNIFICANCE OF LATE REDISTRIBUTION TL-201 IMAGING AFTER REST INJECTION FOR DETECTION OF VIABLE MYOCARDIUM

Citation
I. Matsunari et al., SIGNIFICANCE OF LATE REDISTRIBUTION TL-201 IMAGING AFTER REST INJECTION FOR DETECTION OF VIABLE MYOCARDIUM, The Journal of nuclear medicine, 38(7), 1997, pp. 1073-1078
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Radiology,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
ISSN journal
01615505
Volume
38
Issue
7
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1073 - 1078
Database
ISI
SICI code
0161-5505(1997)38:7<1073:SOLRTI>2.0.ZU;2-9
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine whether late redistribution ima ging after rest injection of Tl-201 would provide further information on myocardial viability over conventional rest-early redistribution Tl -201 imaging. Methods: Twenty-nine patients with coronary artery disea se and left ventricular dysfunction underwent rest, early (3-4 hr) and late (20-24 hr) redistribution Tl-201 and gated blood pool studies. I n 14 patients with successful revascularization, gated blood pool stud y was repeated after the coronary intervention. Results: Nine of 29 pa tients showed early redistribution, and six additional patients showed further redistribution on the late images. Of 136 segments with initi al Tl-201 defects, 18 showed early redistribution, and 10 showed late redistribution. When a threshold of 60% of peak activity was used as a n index of myocardial viability, only a small fraction (3%) of the ini tial Tl-201 defects were additionally considered viable by the late im ages. In 14 patients who underwent revascularization, the positive (69 %) and negative (87%) predictive Values of the early redistribution im ages for functional recovery were similar to those obtained by the lat e images (68% and 86%, respectively). Conclusion: Although tate redist ribution after rest injection of Tl-201 occasionally occurs, most of t he clinically relevant information on myocardial viability may be obta ined by conventional rest-early redistribution Tl-201 imaging when the defect severity is considered an index of tissue viability.