Circulation, Vol 82, 1305-1315, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
JJ Mahmarian, CM Pratt, MK Cocanougher and MS Verani
The extent of abnormally perfused myocardium was compared in patients with
and without chest pain during treadmill exercise from a large, relatively
low-risk consecutive patient population (n = 356) referred for quantitative
thallium-201 single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). All
patients had concurrent coronary angiography. Patients were excluded if
they had prior coronary angioplasty or bypass surgery. Tomographic images
were assessed visually and from computer- generated polar maps. Chest pain
during exercise was as frequent in patients with normal coronary arteries
(12%) as in those with significant (greater than 50% stenosis) coronary
artery disease (CAD) (14%). In the 219 patients with significant CAD,
silent ischemia was fivefold more common than symptomatic ischemia (83%
versus 17%, p = 0.0001). However, there were no differences in the extent,
severity, or distribution of coronary stenoses in patients with silent or
symptomatic ischemia. Our major observation was that the extent of
quantified SPECT perfusion defects was nearly identical in patients with
(20.9 +/- 15.9%) and without (20.5 +/- 15.6%) exertional chest pain. The
sensitivity for detecting the presence of CAD was significantly improved
with quantitative SPECT compared with stress electrocardiography (87%
versus 65%, p = 0.0001). Although scintigraphic and electrocardiographic
evidence of exercise-induced ischemia were comparable in patients with
chest pain (67% versus 73%, respectively; p = NS), SPECT was superior to
stress electrocardiography for detecting silent myocardial ischemia (52%
versus 35%, respectively; p = 0.01). The majority of patients in this study
with CAD who developed ischemia during exercise testing were asymptomatic,
although they exhibited an angiographic profile and extent of abnormally
perfused myocardium similar to those of patients with symptomatic ischemia.
The prognostic significance of quantified perfusion defects detected by
SPECT remains to be assessed.
ARTICLES
Altered myocardial perfusion in patients with angina pectoris or silent ischemia during exercise as assessed by quantitative thallium-201 single-photon emission computed tomography
Department of Internal Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Methodist Hospital, Houston, TX 77030.
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