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(Circulation. 1995;91:1381-1388.)
© 1995 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Departments of Medicine and Nuclear Medicine, McMaster University Medical Centre, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Correspondence to Ernest L. Fallen, MD, McMaster University Medical Centre, Rm 3U4, 1200 Main St W, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L8N 3Z5.
| Abstract |
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Methods and Results Myocardial perfusion with [13N]ammonia was estimated from dynamic time-activity curves at baseline and 3 hours following application of either a 0.4 mg/h GTN skin patch (n=10) or a placebo patch (n=10) in a double-blind parallel design. From resliced cross-sectional images, regional flow, expressed as [13N]ammonia retention, was estimated from 216 myocardial sectors. Ischemia was defined as a significant reduction (>2 SDs from average counts/pixel in maximally perfused zones) in [13N]ammonia retention within 10 contiguous myocardial sectors coupled with an increase or no change in counts derived from [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose. There was no change in global myocardial blood flow as expressed by [13N]ammonia retention following either placebo (0.61±0.14 to 0.62±0.12 min-1) or GTN (0.75±0.22 to 0.74±0.19 min-1). Conversely, there was a significant increase in the proportion of blood flow to the ischemic zones with GTN (73.9±12.6% to 94.9±17.8%; P<.05). No change in the distribution of blood flow to either ischemic or nonischemic zones was observed with placebo. A slight but insignificant decrease in [13N]ammonia retention in nonischemic zones was observed with GTN (1.01±0.31 to 0.93±0.26 min-1).
Conclusions This study suggests that under resting conditions topical GTN alters myocardial perfusion by preferentially increasing flow to areas of reduced perfusion with little or no change in global myocardial perfusion in patients whose angina is responsive to GTN.
Key Words: radioisotopes perfusion nitroglycerin
| Introduction |
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In 1968, Fam and McGregor8 reported a unique observation on the heterogeneity of coronary flow based on differential sites of action of various coronary vasodilators. They demonstrated that intravenous nitroglycerin selectively relaxes the epicardial (conductance) vessels, thereby facilitating flow through collateral channels to zones of myocardial ischemia. Conversely, dipyridamole exerted its potent vasodilating action on the smaller resistance vessels, thus directing blood away from obstructed vessels with impaired autoregulatory function. The authors suggested that the difference in the sites of action of the drugs may explain their contrasting pharmacologic effects in patients with coronary artery disease.
It was therefore inferred that nitroglycerin may exert part of its antianginal effect by preferentially directing nutrient flow to ischemic myocardium. To our knowledge this has only been tested in humans by using either washout rates of intramyocardial 133Xe in anesthetized open-chest hearts9 or by computer-assisted measurements of luminal stenosis.10 11 Positron emission tomography (PET) offers a noninvasive approach that permits quantitative measurements of both global and regional myocardial perfusion in patients with coronary artery disease. Using [13N]ammonia as a flow tracer, we set out to quantify changes in global and regional myocardial perfusion in response to a single topical application of nitroglycerin in patients with angiographically proven coronary artery disease.
| Methods |
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Excluded were patients with an acute myocardial infarction or a revascularization procedure within 3 months prior to the study. Also excluded were patients with uncontrolled arrhythmias, systolic hypotension (<100 mm Hg), intolerance to nitrates, and associated cardiovascular conditions such as tight aortic stenosis, diabetes mellitus, congestive heart failure, or cardiomyopathy. The protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board of McMaster University Medical Centre. All patients gave written informed consent prior to the study.
Study Design
This was a double-blind randomized placebo
control study. Each
patient entered the nuclear medicine laboratory following a 48-hour
washout period during which time all cardiac medications (ß-blockers,
calcium blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and
long-acting nitrates) were discontinued. Sublingual nitroglycerin was
allowed as needed, and the number, dose, and time of administration
were carefully documented. Patients were permitted a light breakfast
between 7 and 8 AM, and all studies began between 8:30
and 9 AM.
To identify surface landmarks for accurate positioning of the heart within the 10-cm field of view of the tomograph scanner, patients were first placed under a gamma camera and given an intravenous injection of 99mTcsulfur colloid (2.5 mCi) to outline the liver. The diaphragmatic and apical borders of the heart were identified as contiguous with the left superior edge of the liver and so marked on the patient's precordium. Patients were then positioned within the gantry of an ECAT 953/31 (Siemens, Hoffman Est. Il) tomograph scanner. The scanner was equipped with 16 detector rings, which allowed acquisition of 31 contiguous transaxial slices. To verify anatomic landmarks and to correct for tissue attenuation, a rectilinear and transmission scan using a 68Ge ring source was acquired over 30 minutes. All patients then received 12 to 15 mCi [13N]ammonia as an IV injection over 30 seconds. Dynamic images were acquired over 24.33 minutes (12 frames at 5 s/frame, 4 frames at 20 s/frame, 2 frames at 60 s/frame, and the final image acquired over 20 minutes).
Immediately following this baseline scan, 20 patients were randomly allocated to receive a precordial skin patch containing either nitroglycerin (Nitro-Dur 0.4 mg/h; n=10) or placebo (n=10). Serial blood samples were drawn at baseline (just prior to patch application), 1.5 hours, and 3 hours for determination of 1,2- and 1,3-dinitroglycerin plasma levels.12
Two hours following patch application, patients were given a glucose drink (Trutol; 50 gm) to facilitate uptake of fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) based on substrate concentration. At 3 hours they reentered the scanner. A second transmission scan followed by a second [13N]ammonia study were repeated in an identical manner as described above. Following this [13N]ammonia dynamic acquisition study and approximately 90 minutes into a glucose-loaded state, 8 to 10 mCi 18FDG was injected intravenously. At the end of a 45-minute equilibration period, emission data for myocardial 18FDG were acquired over 30 minutes. The FDG study was done to help differentiate zones of ischemia from those of infarction (vida infra). A three-lead ECG (II, III, and V5), heart rate, and cuff blood pressure were continually monitored before and every 10 minutes during each acquisition study.
Image Analysis
With the aid of a computerized coordinate
system developed in
our laboratory, each set of transaxial images was realigned along the
longest base-to-apex axis to display images in both sagittal and
anteroposterior planes. From these sets, cross-sectional images
perpendicular to the long axis were reconstructed. Using the junction
of the right ventricular wall with the anterior interventricular septum
as a landmark, the images were sectioned circumferentially into 36
equal segments for each of 6 base-to-apex equidistant slices for a
total of 218 sectional pies (Fig 1
). The mean count
density, expressed as
counts · pixel-1 · second-1,
was computed for each myocardial sector.
|
Measurement of 13N Retention
From the final image
of each dynamic acquisition series, the
radioactivity within the myocardial wall was determined as follows. For
each of the six cross-sectional slices a circle was fitted to the
pixels containing the maximum counts within the myocardial wall. The
region of interest for each myocardial sector was then defined by an
area extending 5 pixels toward the epicardium and 4 pixels toward the
endocardium from points within the circle of best fit. The size of each
pixel was 1.9 mm. This region of interest had to be contained within
the thickness of the wall as determined by visual analysis. The
arterial input function was determined from the center of the blood
pool best defined as lying within the basal segment of the transaxial
image. A
variate function was fit to the washout of the
[13N]ammonia blood activity curve, and the integral was
determined.13 14 13N retention was then
calculated as the ratio of the 13N concentration in
myocardium divided by the corresponding integrated input
function.15 13N retention has been shown to be
proportional to myocardial blood flow.13 15
Global and Regional Myocardial Perfusion Measurements
Regional perfusion expressed as 13N retention was
calculated for each of the 216 sectors (36 piesx6 slices). Global
myocardial perfusion was determined as the average of all
13N retention measurements. Regional myocardial perfusion
was defined as the average 13N retention for selected
segments containing at least five contiguous sectors incorporating two
adjacent slices. The regions designated as reduced perfusion, or
"ischemic," were defined as a reduction in 13N counts
by at least 2 SDs below the mean of the maximum count density in the
normally perfused or "nonischemic" sectors. The latter was
defined as the five contiguous sectors incorporating two adjacent
slices that contained the maximum count density. These nonischemic
zones always corresponded to myocardial regions subtended by patent
coronary arteries as seen angiographically. The ischemic zones were
also required to demonstrate no change or an increase in FDG uptake
(mismatch).
In the glucose-loaded state, 18FDG myocardial
radioactivity
was derived from
counts · pixel-1 · second-1 of
the
last frame normalized for the blood radioactivity at 20 minutes.
Accepting the fact that glucose utilization rates are highly variable,
even in normally perfused myocardium, a region characterized as an
infarct zone or scar had to show a net reduction both in FDG
radioactivity (>2 SDs below the mean counts in zones of maximal FDG
uptake) and a corresponding reduction in 13N retention as
defined above for ischemic zones. This is illustrated in Fig 2
,
in which normally perfused zones are seen alongside
zones of reduced perfusion and scar in the same patient.
|
Statistical Analysis
A paired Student's t test
was used to test the
difference in the effect of nitroglycerin and placebo on both global
and regional retention of [13N]ammonia compared with
baseline values. All values are expressed as mean±SD.
2 analysis was used for categorical
variables, and nonpaired t test was used for comparing
continuous variables between the groups' demographic and clinical
characteristics. Reproducibility and variability of regional count
density for all sectors was assessed by coefficient of variation
values, and the intraclass correlation coefficient was used to compare
baseline with placebo values.
| Results |
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To illustrate the flow and metabolic characteristics of different zones
in multivessel disease, a linear display of a circumferential sector
from one of the patients is shown in Fig 2
. This patient had an
anteroapical infarct (sectors 12 through 20), wherein is seen a
reduction in both 18FDG and 13NH3
retention values and between baseline and postnitroglycerin patch
values. Note is made of the mismatch between the elevated
18FDG and depressed baseline 13NH3
values in the posterolateral zone of reduced perfusion (sectors 25
through 35). Nitroglycerin appears to have redistributed flow to the
ischemic zone.
Reproducibility and stability of the perfusion method was analyzed by
comparing the sector count densities for 13N retention
between baseline and placebo states (Table 2
). The mean
13N retention values were 0.61±0.14 and 0.62±0.12
min-1 for baseline and placebo, respectively (Tables
2
and 3
). Although the intergroup values were
almost
identical, the interpatient perfusion values varied widely, with
coefficients of variation of 22.9% and 19.4% for baseline and placebo
groups, respectively, and an intraclass correlation coefficient of .51.
There was, however, remarkable reproducibility within patients from one
state to the next, with an average percent difference of mean count
density of only 2.70±1.42. The average global 13N
retention for both states was 0.62 min-1 with confidence
limits from 0.47 min-1 to 0.77 min-1 at the
95% level.
|
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Fig 3A
shows an example of the reproducibility of
13N retention data expressed as a percent change from
baseline 3 hours following application of a placebo skin patch. The
change from baseline was less than 5% for all sectors and slices. By
contrast, Fig 3B
shows considerably more variability in a
patient who
had received a nitroglycerin patch; the significant increase in
13N retention in the anterolateral zone (sectors 28 through
35) corresponds to a high-grade circumflex artery stenosis. The
apparent decrease in perfusion of sectors 5 through 15, a zone
identified as subtending a patent left anterior descending artery, may
represent either redistributed flow attributed to the effect of
nitroglycerin on conductance vessels or a decrease in wall stress and
left ventricular end-diastolic pressure due to the
unloading effect of nitroglycerin.
|
The relation between global myocardial perfusion as measured by the
average 13N retention counts in all sectors and the work of
the heart expressed as the double rate-pressure product is shown in
Table 3
. Under resting supine conditions, there were no
significant changes in either heart rate or systolic blood pressure for
either group. If anything, there was a slight but insignificant
decrease in the average peak systolic blood pressure with
nitroglycerin, from 127±10 to 119±11 mm Hg, 3 hours following
patch
application. Although the baseline values for global 13N
retention appear to differ between placebo and nitroglycerin groups
(0.61±0.14 versus 0.75±0.22 min-1), the
variability
between patients was high, with a coefficient of variation ranging from
13% to 29%. This interpatient variation in myocardial perfusion
contrasts sharply with the intrapatient reproducibility of the
13N retention taken 3 hours apart for the placebo group
(Table 2
and Fig 3A
). Neither the global
perfusion as expressed by
13N retention nor the double rate-pressure product was
altered significantly with nitroglycerin. External work per unit flow,
roughly expressed as the ratio of the double rate-pressure product to
13N retention, was unchanged by the application of either
placebo or nitroglycerin patch.
The time-dependent changes in the double rate-pressure product with
either nitroglycerin or placebo are illustrated in Fig 4
.
Superimposed is the time course of plasma levels for
1,2-dinitroglycerin. Despite a progressive increase in plasma levels of
nitroglycerin, the double rate-pressure product remained constant and,
as a consequence, so did the requirement for myocardial perfusion
(Table 3
). Plasma levels for 1,3-dinitroglycerin were also
assayed and
showed a similar time course.
|
In sharp contrast to the lack of change in global myocardial perfusion,
the topical application of nitroglycerin significantly altered the
regional distribution of myocardial perfusion. Comparison of regional
13N retention between normal zones of perfusion and zones
of reduced perfusion (ischemic segments) is shown in Table 4
.
There were no changes in regional perfusion to either
nonischemic or ischemic zones following topical application of the
placebo patch. However, nitroglycerin appeared to preferentially
increase perfusion to ischemic zones by increasing the relative
myocardial retention of [13N]ammonia, from 73±13%
to
94.9±18% (P<.05). As expected, proportional uptake of
13N radioactivity in the ischemic zone was, on average,
less than in the nonischemic zone for both placebo and nitroglycerin
groups at baseline (overall mean difference, -0.17±0.16
min-1; P<.002). The preferential enhancement
of flow to the ischemic zones with nitroglycerin is illustrated in Fig
5
. There was less than a 5% change in regional
perfusion following application of the placebo patch regardless of
which zone was analyzed. Similarly, the apparent decrease in regional
perfusion to the nonischemic zone following nitroglycerin was less than
5% (P=NS). A change in radioactive uptake of less than 5%
with any intervention is within the experimental error of the
technique. On the other hand, there was a significant 11.3±3%
increase in 13N retention in the ischemic zone following
topical application of nitroglycerin.
|
|
Fig 6
illustrates two polar maps of
13N radioactivity in a patient who received topical
nitroglycerin. The left hand map (prepatch) shows the variation
in regional uptake of [13N]ammonia
throughout the left ventricle with reduced perfusion in the
anteroapical and posterior segments (areas in blue). Three hours after
application of nitroglycerin, the anteroapical segments (just above the
center zone) appear to have filled in, with little or no change
elsewhere. This example is a visual illustration of preferential
perfusion to an ischemic zone with nitroglycerin under resting supine
conditions.
|
| Discussion |
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Myocardial zones of reduced perfusion were designated as "ischemic" and arbitrarily defined as a contiguous set of five sectors in two adjacent slices having average count · pixel-1 · second-1 of retained [13N]ammonia at least 2 SDs below the average counts in nonischemic zones. These measurements were done in the rest supine state. The data would perhaps have been more persuasive had the patients been subjected to exercise in order to induce ischemia. However, the use of exercise with PET is fraught with problems, not the least of which is exact repositioning of the heart in the tomograph scanner.13 Furthermore, interpretation of myocardial blood flow as an expression of [13N]ammonia extraction (or retention) by the myocardium is hazardous since any increase in net extraction in a high-flow state may seriously underestimate the true changes in myocardial perfusion.16 These drawbacks were mitigated by the combined use of 13NH3 and 18FDG, which enabled us to identify and dissociate zones of ischemia from infarcted tissue.
Validation of our methods was supported by two observations. First,
there was less than a 5% variation in 13N retention in any
of the 216 sectors when comparing baseline with 3 hours of placebo
patch (Table 2
and Fig 3
). Second, there was
over 90% concordance
between a significant decrease in 13N retention of a
myocardial sector (>2 SDs below the mean) and the presence of a
significant stenosis (>50%) in the artery supplying that zone.
Instead of relying solely on static extraction data, regional perfusion was expressed as 13N retention derived from dynamic acquisition data. This provides more reliable and accurate estimates of flow.13 17 Contamination of myocardial retention data by partial volume and spillover effects becomes especially relevant when estimating radioactivity in areas of myocardial infarct thinning. This was partially avoided by calculating the arterial input function from the center of the ventricular lumen of the most basal segment, which minimizes spillover but does not eliminate it entirely. We were encouraged, however, by the consistent reproducibility of the 13N retention images before and after placebo. In all 10 patients receiving the placebo patch, the percent difference of the means for global and regional counts varied by less than 5% between baseline and placebo states.
The average 13N retention value for global 13N
retention (Table 3
) appears less than some of the average
regional
perfusion values (Table 4
). This is explained by the wide
regional
variation in [13N]ammonia uptake in hearts with
multivessel disease containing several regions of reduced perfusion and
previous myocardial infarcts. Moreover, the baseline global retentions
for the placebo group (0.61±0.14 min-1) were, on
average,
actually less than the nitroglycerin group (0.75±0.22
min-1). However, the interpatient variation was quite high
(coefficients of variation, 20% and 22%, respectively, for the
placebo and nitroglycerin groups), which is not surprising considering
the variability of segmental disease and myocardial scar in these
patients. On the other hand, the intrapatient reproducibility for
13N retention was very narrow for the placebo group, and it
was the percent change in relative myocardial perfusion that was
measured, using each patient as his or her own control. Furthermore,
the baseline global value for the nitroglycerin group (0.75±0.22
min-1) was within the confidence intervals of the values
derived from both the baseline and placebo states (Table 2
).
The double rate-pressure product was used as an expression of left ventricular work in this study. This measurement ignores the contribution of left ventricular volume and wall stress as major determinants of oxygen demand and, hence, flow. However, it is well known that nitroglycerin reduces left ventricular filling volume,18 19 thereby maintaining or even reducing demand for global coronary blood flow in the face of an unchanged double rate-pressure product. Moreover, a decrease in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure by nitroglycerin would, theoretically, potentiate transmural blood flow, but this effect in the absence of a change in energy demand would be negligible. Moreover, it would be uniform for all segments.
As for the effect of nitroglycerin on the coronary circulation, it has been repeatedly observed that nitroglycerin visibly dilates the large epicardial branches of coronary arteries.20 Moreover, there is oftentimes evidence for relief of large vessel coronary spasm within minutes of sublingual nitroglycerin21 as well as vasodilation of stenotic segments.22 What is less well known is the site and mechanism of the complex effects of this drug on coronary dynamics. While nitroglycerin dilates large epicardial coronary arteries, it has little or no effect on total coronary blood flow or coronary vascular resistance.6 7
In a classic series of experiments Fam and McGregor8 23 compared the site and action of different coronary artery vasodilators. Using open-chest anesthetized dogs, they discovered that flow in the poststenotic coronary artery was enhanced with intravenous nitroglycerin by virtue of the relaxing effect of the drug on large conductance vessels. With no change in arteriolar resistance of the nonobstructed vascular bed, they postulated that coronary flow was preferentially directed through collaterals to the poststenotic zone of ischemia. By contrast, intravenous dipyridamole caused a significant reduction in coronary arteriolar resistance, thereby augmenting coronary flow to nonischemic myocardium at the expense of flow to the already dilated poststenotic vessel. Others have since substantiated the differential site of action of nitroglycerin on the coronary vasculature in experimental animals24 25 26 and humans.11
Kurz et al27 recently proposed an interesting and persuasive explanation for this heterogeneous coronary vascular response to nitroglycerin. The coronary arterioles apparently lack the necessary sulfhydryl-containing compound (L-cysteine) to convert nitroglycerin to its active metabolite, S-nitroso-L-cysteine.28 29 By suffusing epicardial microvessels in vivo with nitroglycerin, Kurz et al27 were able to show significant dilatation of the arteriolar vessels only in the presence of a thiol, L-cysteine. This was a stereospecific reaction, suggesting an intracellular or membrane-associated mechanism. Hence, the lack of available sulfhydryl groups in the small resistance coronary vessels may explain the failure of nitroglycerin to alter small vessel coronary vascular resistance while dilating the large epicardial vessels.
However, it is possible that the observed increase in 13N retention to ischemic zones may in part be due to improved regional wall motion or a favorable transmural pressure gradient due to a decrease in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure and wall stress. An alternative explanation is that the so-called redistribution was actually the consequence of a direct effect of nitroglycerin on increasing the luminal diameter of vessel stenosis.10 22 This effect was at a dose that may or may not be achievable by topical nitroglycerin. Such a direct increase in cross-sectional stenosis area would, conceivably, alter global myocardial blood flow, assuming no change in flow to nonischemic zones. Although such an effect was not seen in this study, a mechanism of a direct vasodilatory effect cannot be refuted by the present results. Fujita et al,11 also using computerized quantitatative coronary arteriography, found that intracoronary nitroglycerin dilated the recipient coronary arteries more than the donor arteries, suggesting an enhancement of flow through collateral channels.
In summary, our study shows that the application of topical nitroglycerin appears to exert changes in myocardial perfusion by preferential distribution of flow to areas of myocardial ischemia with little or no significant change in either total myocardial perfusion or cardiac work. This observation may help explain part of the antianginal properties of the coronary vasodilatory effects of nitroglycerin. The study also draws attention to PET as a potentially useful tool in unraveling the mechanisms of various interventions on regional myocardial blood flow.
| Acknowledgments |
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Received September 26, 1994; accepted October 3, 1994.
| References |
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