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(Circulation. 1997;95:1799-1805.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Section of Cardiology, Baylor College of Medicine, and the Methodist Hospital, Houston, Tex.
Correspondence to Mario S. Verani, MD, Baylor College of Medicine and The Methodist Hospital, 6550 Fannin, SM-677, Houston, TX 77030. E-mail mverani{at}bcm.tmc.edu
Background Recent observations suggest that administration of nitrates before 201Tl reinjection enhances the detection of reversible myocardial hypoperfusion.
Methods and Results Ninety-six patients who underwent
exercise-redistribution 201Tl single photon emission
computed tomography (SPECT) and had persistent defects at 4-hour
redistribution imaging were prospectively randomized into a
double-blind protocol in which they received a reinjection of
201Tl (1.0 mCi) 5 minutes after either placebo or 0.8 mg
sublingual nitroglycerin administration, followed by repeat SPECT
imaging. Of the 69 patients who had coronary angiography, all except
one had significant coronary stenoses. The overall extent of perfusion
defect and the reversible component assessed by polar maps of the
stress-redistribution images were similar in patients who received
nitroglycerin or placebo. Among the 66 patients with persistent defects
in the redistribution images, 58% of those receiving nitroglycerin
showed improved reversibility after reinjection, compared with 33% of
patients receiving placebo (P<.05). Among 68 patients with
significant coronary stenoses, those who received nitroglycerin and had
coronary collateral circulation were more likely to exhibit improved
reversibility after reinjection than the remaining patients (50%
versus 21%, P<.05). Moreover, the ratio of reversible to
total defect in the vascular territories supplied by collaterals was
0.50 after reinjection in 80% of patients who received nitroglycerin
(n=20) compared with 40% of the patients who received placebo (n=15)
(P<.05).
Conclusions Nitrate-augmented 201Tl reinjection significantly, albeit modestly, improves detection of defect reversibility, especially in patients with coronary collateral circulation.
Key Words: coronary disease nitroglycerin myocardium tomography
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