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Diagnosis

(Page 4)

Some expert groups recommend CT scans in selected patients who have an intermediate risk (10 - 20% chance of heart disease within 10 years). For some of these patients, EBCT may be a better first choice than exercise stress testing. In general, the use of these expensive imaging tests are probably not very helpful in people at low or high risk. (In people with high risk, the additional information from these tests would not add much value.) More research is needed to determine the benefits of CT scanning in specific individuals.

Radionuclide Imaging

Radionuclide procedures use imaging techniques and computer analyses to plot and detect the passage of radioactive tracers through the region of the heart. Such tracing elements are typically given intravenously. Radionuclide imaging is useful for diagnosing and determining:

  • Severity of unstable angina when less expensive diagnostic approaches are unavailable or unreliable
  • Severity of chronic coronary artery disease
  • Success of surgeries for coronary artery disease.
  • Whether a heart attack has occurred

Various imaging techniques may be used with radionuclide procedures, including:

  • Planar scintigraphy uses a special overhead camera and is the oldest scanning technique.
  • Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) uses a camera that rotates around the patient and takes pictures of "slices" of the heart. It is more accurate than planar imaging in precisely locating problems in the arteries.
  • Positron-emission tomographic (PET) scanners employ multiple rings that surround the patients, which detect and record atomic particles (photons) that are emitted by the tracer elements (such as radioactive oxygen, nitrogen, or carbon). It is more expensive and less widely available than SPECT.

Myocardial Perfusion (Blood Flow) Imaging Test (also called the Thallium Stress Test). This radionuclide test is typically used with an exercise stress test to determine blood flow to the heart muscles. It is a reliable measure of severe heart events. It may be useful in determining the need for angiography if CT scans have detected calcification in the arteries. About a minute before the patient is ready to stop exercising, the doctor administers a radioactive tracer into the intravenous line. (Tracers include thallium, technetium, or sestamibi.) Immediately afterwards, the patient lies down for a heart scan, usually with a planar scintigraphy or with SPECT. If the scan detects damage, more images are taken 3 or 4 hours later. Damage due to a prior heart attack will persist when the heart scan is repeated. Injury caused by angina, however, will have resolved by that time.


Review Date: 04/12/2006
Reviewed By: Harvey Simon, M.D., Editor-in-Chief, Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Physician, Massachusetts General Hospital

A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org).
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