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J Am Coll Cardiol, 2003; 42:1318-1333, doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2003.08.011
© 2003 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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ACC/AHA GUIDELINE

ACC/AHA/ASNC Guidelines for the Clinical Use of Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging—Executive Summary

A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (ACC/AHA/ASNC Committee to Revise the 1995 Guidelines for the Clinical Use of Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging)4 ,5 ,6 ,7 ,8

Committee Members, Francis J. Klocke, MD, MACC, FAHA, Chair, Michael G. Baird, MD, FACC, FAHA, Beverly H. Lorell, MD, FACC, FAHA, Timothy M. Bateman, MD, FACC, FAHA, Joseph V. Messer, MD, MACC, FAHA, Daniel S. Berman, MD, FACC, FAHA, Patrick T. O’Gara, MD, FACC, Blase A. Carabello, MD, FACC, FAHA, Richard O. Russell, Jr, MD, FACC, Manuel D. Cerqueira, MD, FACC, FAHA, Martin G. St. John Sutton, MBBS, FACC, Anthony N. DeMaria, MD, MACC, FAHA, James E. Udelson, MD, FACC, J. Ward Kennedy, MD, MACC, FAHA, Mario S. Verani, MD, FACC*, Kim Allan Williams, MD, FACC, FAHA Task Force Members, Elliott M. Antman, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair, Sidney C. Smith, Jr, MD, FACC, FAHA, Vice-Chair, Joseph S. Alpert, MD, FACC, Gabriel Gregoratos, MD, FACC, FAHA, Jeffrey L. Anderson, MD, FACC, Loren F. Hiratzka, MD, FACC, FAHA, David P. Faxon, MD, FACC, FAHA, Sharon Ann Hunt, MD, FACC, FAHA, Valentin Fuster, MD, PhD, FACC, FAHA, Alice K. Jacobs, MD, FACC, FAHA, Raymond J. Gibbons, MD, FACC, FAHA{dagger} {ddagger}, Richard O. Russell, MD, FACC

Key Words: ACC/AHA Guidelines • imaging • radioisotopes • testing



    Table of contents
 Top
 Table of contents
 I. Introduction
 II. Acute syndromes
 III. Chronic syndromes
 IV. Heart failure
 References
 
  1. Introduction 1319
  2. Acute Syndromes 1320
    1. Myocardial Perfusion Imaging in the Assessment of Patients Presenting With Chest Pain to the Emergency Department 1320
    2. Detection of AMI When Conventional Measures Are Nondiagnostic 1320
    3. Radionuclide Testing in Risk Assessment: Prognosis and Assessment of Therapy After STEMI 1320
    4. Radionuclide Testing in Risk Assessment: Prognosis and Assessment of Therapy After NSTEMI or UA 1320

  3. Chronic Syndromes 1321
    1. Detection (Diagnosis) of CAD 1321
      1. Sensitivity and Specificity 1321
      2. Effect of Referral Bias 1321
      3. Quantitative Analysis 1322
      4. ECG-Gated SPECT 1322
      5. Attenuation Correction 1322
      6. Positron Emission Tomography 1322

    2. Management of Patients With Known or Suspected Chronic CAD: Assessment of Disease Severity, Risk Stratification, Prognosis 1322
      1. Nongated Myocardial Perfusion Imaging 1322
      2. Gated SPECT 1322
      3. Radionuclide Angiography 1322
      4. Cost Effectiveness 1322
      5. Frequency of Testing 1322
      6. Evaluation of the Effects of Medical Therapy 1322

    3. Specific Patient Populations 1322
      1. African Americans 1322
      2. Women 1322
      3. Normal Resting ECG, Able to Exercise 1323
      4. Intermediate-Risk Duke Treadmill Score 1323
      5. Normal Resting ECG, Unable to Exercise 1323
      6. LBBB/Pacemakers 1323
      7. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy 1323
      8. Patients With Nonspecific ST-T-Wave Changes 1323
      9. Elderly 1323
      10. Asymptomatic Patients 1323
      11. Obese Patients 1323
      12. Diabetes 1323
      13. After Coronary Calcium Screening 1324
      14. Before and After Revascularization 1324
      15. Radionuclide Imaging Before Noncardiac Surgery 1324

    4. Recommendations 1324

  4. Heart Failure 1326
    1. Introduction 1326
    2. Assessment of LV Function 1327
      1. Assessment of LV Systolic Dysfunction 1327
      2. Assessment of LV Diastolic Dysfunction 1327

    3. Assessment of CAD 1327
      1. Importance of Detecting CAD in Heart Failure Patients 1327
      2. Myocardial Perfusion Imaging to Detect CAD in Heart Failure Patients 1327

    4. Assessment of Myocardial Viability 1327
      1. Goals of Assessing Myocardial Viability 1327
      2. General Principles of Assessing Myocardial Viability by Radionuclide Techniques 1328
      3. Techniques and Protocols for Assessing Myocardial Viability 1328
      4. Image Interpretation for Myocardial Viability: Quantitative Versus Visual Analysis of Tracer Activities 1328
      5. Comparison of Techniques 1328

    5. Etiologies of Heart Failure 1329
      1. Dilated Cardiomyopathy 1329
      2. Dilated Cardiomyopathy Due to Doxorubicin/Anthracycline Cardiotoxicity 1329
      3. Dilated Cardiomyopathy Due to Myocarditis 1329
      4. Posttransplantation Rejection and Allograft Vasculopathy 1329
      5. Chagas Myocarditis and/or Cardiomyopathy 1330
      6. Sarcoid Heart Disease 1330
      7. Cardiac Amyloidosis 1330
      8. RV Dysplasia 1330
      9. Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy 1330
      10. Hypertensive Heart Disease 1330
      11. Valvular Heart Disease 1330
      12. Adults With Congenital Heart Disease 1331


References 1331


    I. Introduction
 Top
 Table of contents
 I. Introduction
 II. Acute syndromes
 III. Chronic syndromes
 IV. Heart failure
 References
 
The American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) Task Force on Practice Guidelines regularly reviews existing guidelines to determine when an update or full revision is needed. Guidelines for the Clinical Use of Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging were originally published in 1986 and updated in 1995. Important new developments have continued to occur since 1995, particularly in the areas of acute and chronic ischemic syndromes and heart failure. The Task Force therefore believed the topic should be revisited de novo and invited the American Society for Nuclear Cardiology (ASNC) to cosponsor the undertaking, which represents a joint effort of the 3 organizations.

The full-text guideline is available on the Internet (www.acc.org, www.americanheart.org, and www.asnc.org). It discusses the usefulness of nuclear cardiological techniques in 3 broad areas: acute ischemic syndromes, chronic syndromes, and heart failure. Utility is considered for diagnosis, severity of disease/risk assessment/prognosis, and assessment of therapy. An appendix provides descriptions of individual techniques. This Executive Summary includes recommended indications for the use of specific techniques and summary evaluations of topics addressed in the full-text document. Additional supporting evidence and a complete reference list are presented in the full-text document.

The current guideline overlaps with several previously published ACC/AHA guidelines for patient treatment that potentially involve cardiac radionuclide imaging. These include published guidelines for chronic stable angina (SA; 2002), unstable angina and non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (UA/NSTEMI; 2002), heart failure (2001), perioperative cardiovascular evaluation for noncardiac surgery (2002), exercise testing (2002), valvular heart disease (1998), and acute myocardial infarction (AMI; 1999). The present report is not intended to include information previously covered in these guidelines or to provide a comprehensive treatment of the topics addressed in these guidelines.

The ACC/AHA classifications I, II, and III are used to summarize indications as follows:

Class I: Conditions for which there is evidence and/or general agreement that a given procedure or treatment is useful and effective
Class II: Conditions for which there is conflicting evidence and/or a divergence of opinion about the usefulness/efficacy of a procedure or treatment
IIa: Weight of evidence/opinion is in favor of usefulness/efficacy
IIb: Usefulness/efficacy is less well established by evidence/opinion

Class III: Conditions for which there is evidence and/or general agreement that the procedure/treatment is not useful/effective and in some cases may be harmful

Levels of evidence for individual class assignments are designated as follows:

A: Data derived from multiple randomized clinical trials
B: Data derived from a single randomized trial or from nonrandomized studies
C: Consensus opinion of experts

These guidelines will be reviewed annually by the Task Force and will be considered current unless the Task Force revises or withdraws them from distribution.


    II. Acute syndromes
 Top
 Table of contents
 I. Introduction
 II. Acute syndromes
 III. Chronic syndromes
 IV. Heart failure
 References
 
A. Myocardial perfusion imaging in the assessment of patients presenting with chest pain to the emergency department.   Optimal decision-making in patients seen in the emergency department with chest pain requires triage into risk categories on the basis of the probability of AMI, UA, or both and the subsequent risk and potential interventional options. Within such an algorithm, radionuclide imaging provides clinically useful information for diagnosis and management. The UA guidelines use 4 risk levels for chest pain: noncardiac, chronic SA, possible acute coronary syndrome (ACS), and definite ACS (http://www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/unstable/unstable.pdf) (1). Radionuclide imaging is most appropriate in patients with possible ACS. After initial triage on the basis of symptoms, ECG, and history, rest single-photon emission CT (SPECT) imaging appears to be useful for identifying patients at high risk (those with perfusion defects), who should be admitted, and patients with low risk (those with normal scans), who in general may be discharged home with a low risk for subsequent ischemic events. Randomized clinical trials (2,3) now support several observational studies (see Table 1 in the full-text guideline) indicating a high negative predictive value for excluding ACS. Table 1 lists recommendations for emergency department imaging for suspected ACS.


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TABLE 1 Recommendations for Emergency Department Imaging for Suspected ACS

 
B. Detection of AMI when conventional measures are nondiagnostic.   Rest myocardial perfusion imaging with 99mTc tracers has a high sensitivity for diagnosing AMI. Because there is minimal redistribution of the radiopharmaceutical over time, imaging can be delayed for a few hours after the injection and still provide accurate information about myocardial perfusion at the time of injection, which reflects the area of myocardium at risk. Perfusion defects, however, do not distinguish among acute ischemia, acute infarction, or previous infarction.

C. Radionuclide testing in risk assessment: prognosis and assessment of therapy after STEMI.   As discussed in the ACC/AHA Guidelines for the Management of Patients with Acute Myocardial Infarction: 1999 Update (4) (http://www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/nov96/1999/index.htm), the prognosis of STEMI is primarily a function of ejection fraction (EF), infarct size, and residual myocardium at risk. Thus, acute or late measurement of EF, infarct size, and myocardium at risk provides important prognostic management information. Radionuclide techniques are also useful for assessing the presence and extent of stress-induced myocardial ischemia—information that is useful for immediate and long-term patient management (5–9). Table 2 lists recommendations for radionuclide testing in diagnosis, risk assessment, prognosis, and assessment of therapy after acute STEMI.


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TABLE 2 Recommendations for Use of Radionuclide Testing in Diagnosis, Risk Assessment, Prognosis, and Assessment of Therapy After Acute STEMI

 
D. Radionuclide testing in risk assessment: prognosis and assessment of therapy after NSTEMI or UA.   The ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update for the Management of Patients with UA/NSTEMI (1) recommends an early invasive strategy in patients with any of several high-risk indicators and no serious comorbidities. High-risk findings on noninvasive stress testing (eg, myocardial perfusion imaging) are one such indication. In the absence of high-risk findings, the guidelines endorse either an early conservative or early invasive strategy in patients without contraindications for revascularization. Myocardial perfusion imaging is particularly useful in the predischarge risk stratification of patients with UA. The presence and extent of reversible perfusion defects on stress testing after the patient is stabilized are highly predictive of future events (10–14). Table 3 lists recommendations for radionuclide testing for risk assessment/prognosis in patients with NSTEMI or UA.


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TABLE 3 Recommendations for Use of Radionuclide Testing for Risk Assessment/Prognosis in Patients With NSTEMI and UA

 

    III. Chronic syndromes
 Top
 Table of contents
 I. Introduction
 II. Acute syndromes
 III. Chronic syndromes
 IV. Heart failure
 References
 
A. Detection (diagnosis) of coronary artery disease.   A thorough discussion of the concepts of likelihood of coronary artery disease (CAD) is provided in the ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update for the Management of Patients With Chronic Stable Angina (15) (http://www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/stable/stable_clean.pdf), accompanied by a simplified table for estimating pretest probability ranges. Myocardial perfusion imaging is most useful in patients with an intermediate likelihood of angiographically significant CAD on the basis of age, sex, symptoms, risk factors, and the results of stress testing (for patients who have undergone prior stress testing).

1. Sensitivity and specificity
Tables 5 and 6 in the full-text guideline summarize studies reporting sensitivities and specificities of exercise and vasodilator stress perfusion SPECT for the detection of angiographically significant (more than 50% stenosis) CAD. Sensitivities (generally uncorrected for referral bias) average 87% and 89%, respectively; specificities (also uncorrected) average 73% and 75%.


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TABLE 5 Recommendations for the Use of Radionuclide Techniques to Assess Myocardial Viability

 

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TABLE 6 Recommendations for the Use of Radionuclide Imaging to Diagnose Specific Causes of Dilated Cardiomyopathy

 
2. Effect of referral bias
In estimating the true sensitivity and specificity of noninvasive testing, referral or work-up bias needs to be taken into account. Table 7 in the full-text guideline summarizes studies in which effects of referral bias have been estimated. Because of the profound impact of referral bias on specificity, the concept of the normalcy rate has been developed. The term normalcy rate is used to describe the frequency of normal test results in patients with a low likelihood of CAD, to differentiate it from specificity.


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TABLE 7 Recommendations for the Use of Radionuclide Imaging to Evaluate Hypertrophic Heart Disease

 
3. Quantitative analysis
Quantitative analysis of myocardial perfusion SPECT has been developed using a variety of approaches and, in general, has similar sensitivities and specificities compared with those of expert visual analysis.

4. ECG-gated SPECT
The current state of the art is ECG-gated myocardial perfusion SPECT (gated SPECT). The ability to observe myocardial contraction in segments with apparent fixed perfusion defects permits the nuclear test reader to discern attenuation artifacts from true perfusion abnormalities. The ability of gated SPECT to provide measurement of left ventricular (LV) EF (LVEF), segmental wall motion, and absolute LV volumes also adds to the prognostic information that can be derived from a SPECT study.

5. Attenuation correction
The field of attenuation correction continues to evolve rapidly, with some available systems having undergone more detailed and successful clinical validation than others. On the basis of current information and the rate of technology improvement, the Society of Nuclear Medicine and the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology have concluded that attenuation correction has become a method for which the weight of evidence/opinion is in favor of its usefulness (16).

6. Positron emission tomography
Studies involving several hundred patients (see Table 10 in the full-text guideline) indicate that perfusion imaging with positron emission tomography (PET) using dipyridamole and either 82Rb or 13N ammonia is also a sensitive and specific clinical means to diagnose CAD.

B. Management of patients with known or suspected chronic CAD: assessment of disease severity, risk stratification, prognosis.   Nuclear tests are best applied for risk stratification in patients with a clinically intermediate risk of a subsequent cardiac event, analogous to the optimal diagnostic application of nuclear testing to patients with an intermediate likelihood of having CAD. Many of the major determinants of prognosis in CAD can be assessed by measurements of stress-induced perfusion and function. Studies including large patient samples have now demonstrated that factors estimating the extent of LV dysfunction (LVEF, the extent of infarcted myocardium, transient ischemic dilation of the LV, and increased lung uptake) are excellent predictors of cardiac mortality. In contrast, markers of provocative ischemia (exertional symptoms, electrocardiographic changes, the extent of reversible perfusion defects, and stress-induced ventricular dyssynergy) are better predictors of the subsequent development of acute ischemic syndromes (17).

1. Nongated myocardial perfusion imaging
Not withstanding the now well-demonstrated advantages of gated imaging, nongated perfusion scintigraphy has played a major role in risk stratification of CAD patients. The full-text guideline summarizes studies of stress myocardial perfusion imaging in definite or suspected CAD (see Table 12 in the full-text guideline). Normal stress perfusion SPECT results are consistently predictive of a less than 1% annual risk of cardiac death or myocardial infarction.

2. Gated SPECT
The information contained in the combined assessment of perfusion and function with gated myocardial perfusion SPECT is likely to enhance its prognostic and diagnostic content. The most common current approach combines poststress and/or rest LV function by gated SPECT with rest/stress perfusion measurements.

3. Radionuclide angiography
Rest LVEF is universally recognized as one of the most important determinants of long-term prognosis in patients with chronic stable CAD. Radionuclide angiography (RNA) can also be helpful in evaluating dyspnea by establishing the state of right ventricular (RV) and LV performance. LV function during exercise reflects disease severity and provides prognostic information.

4. Cost effectiveness
As indicated in the ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update for the Management of Patients With Chronic Stable Angina (15), cardiac imaging can serve as a gatekeeper to cardiac catheterization to minimize the rate of normal catheterizations and to enrich the angiographic population with a greater proportion of patients with significant, yet treatable, disease.

5. Frequency of testing
Considerations for follow-up testing are also summarized in the ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update for the Management of Patients With Chronic Stable Angina (15). If patients develop new signs or symptoms suggesting a worsened clinical state, repeat testing at the time of worsening would be appropriate. In the absence of a change in clinical state, the estimated patient risk after initial testing (high, intermediate, or low, as defined earlier) should play an important role in individual recommendations (18).

6. Evaluation of the effects of medical therapy
Although the available evidence suggests that the efficacy of therapy can be assessed with repeat SPECT procedures while the patient is under the effects of the medical treatment, information about the effects of medical therapy on outcomes is limited.

C. Specific patient populations.   1. African americans
The role of noninvasive imaging has been studied infrequently in African Americans or other minorities. Normal rest and stress SPECT perfusion studies have been associated with higher rates of AMI and/or cardiac death in African Americans than in other populations (19,20), but included higher than usual cardiac risk patients and did not account for the incidence of LV hypertrophy (LVH) (21).

2. Women
As discussed in the ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update for Exercise Testing (22) (http://www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/exercise/exercise_clean.pdf), the use of radionuclide testing in women is influenced importantly by the later presentation of CAD in women than in men and by sex-related limitations in exercise stress testing. These issues have provoked interest in the potential additive benefit of stress perfusion imaging in women, particularly those with at least an intermediate likelihood of coronary disease (23–26).

3. Normal resting ECG, able to exercise
Patients with a normal resting ECG constitute a large and important subgroup. Most patients who present with multiple risk factors with or without cardiac symptoms have a normal resting ECG. Such patients are likely to have normal LV function and an excellent prognosis. For these reasons, a stepwise strategy is generally recommended in which an exercise ECG, and not a stress imaging procedure, is performed as the initial test in patients with an intermediate pretest likelihood of CAD who are not taking digoxin, have a normal resting ECG, and are able to exercise. A stress imaging technique should be used for patients with widespread rest ST depression (more than 1 mm), complete left bundle-branch block (LBBB), ventricular-paced rhythm, pre-excitation, or LVH with repolarization changes (15).

4. Intermediate-risk duke treadmill score
The Duke treadmill score combines various forms of information from stress testing and provides a simple way to calculate risk (27). Annual mortality rates according to risk groups are presented in the ACC/AHA 2002 Chronic Stable Angina Guideline Update (15). The score has been reported to work well for both inpatients and outpatients and equally well for men and women. Only a small number of elderly patients, however, have been studied. Several studies have demonstrated value of myocardial perfusion scintigraphy in further risk assessment of patients with an intermediate score associated with an intermediate risk of cardiac death (28–30).

5. Normal resting ECG, unable to exercise
In patients with an intermediate to high likelihood of CAD who have a normal resting ECG but are unable to exercise, pharmacologic myocardial perfusion SPECT with adenosine or dipyridamole has been shown to be highly effective in diagnosis and risk stratification.

6. LBBB/Pacemakers
Pharmacologic stress perfusion imaging is preferable to exercise perfusion imaging for purposes of both diagnosis and risk stratification (31,32). Several studies have observed an increased prevalence of myocardial perfusion defects during exercise imaging, in the absence of angiographic coronary disease, in patients with LBBB. Given that ECG testing is nondiagnostic in patients with ventricular pacing in a manner similar to that observed with LBBB, it is likely that the considerations with regard to the use of radionuclide techniques for diagnostic and risk stratification purposes in patients with ventricular pacemakers are the same as those applied to patients with LBBB.

7. Left ventricular hypertrophy
In patients with LVH, with or without resting ST-segment abnormality, ST depression during exercise is frequently present in the absence of significant CAD. In these patients, stress nuclear techniques have similar diagnostic sensitivity and specificity to those observed in patients without LVH. The diagnostic value of myocardial perfusion SPECT is not generally degraded by the presence of hypertension without evidence of LVH (33), although an increased frequency of false-positive studies has been reported in athletes (34). Similarly, although the number of reports is small, the prognostic value of myocardial perfusion SPECT in patients with LVH appears to be equal to that observed in patients without LVH (35).

8. Patients with nonspecific ST-T-wave changes
Patients with nonspecific ST-T-wave changes, such as might occur with digoxin, Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (WPW), or other conditions, are considered to have nondiagnostic stress ECG responses with regard to ST-segment depression. Although there are limited data on the diagnostic and prognostic information for myocardial perfusion SPECT in these patients, those with intermediate to high likelihood of coronary disease can perhaps be effectively assessed for detection and risk stratification with myocardial perfusion SPECT.

9. Elderly
Prognostic value of perfusion scintigraphy in elderly patients has been reported (36).

10. Asymptomatic patients
The relatively low prevalence of CAD and risk of future events will affect the performance of any diagnostic test in a manner predictable by Bayesian principles (ie, positive predictive value will usually be low). It is not clear that detecting asymptomatic preclinical CAD will lead to therapeutic intervention that will reduce risk beyond that indicated by risk factor profiling and currently recommended strategies to reduce risk (37).

Persons whose occupations may affect public safety (eg, airline pilots, truckers, bus drivers) or who are professional or high-profile athletes commonly undergo periodic exercise testing for statutory reasons (22). In some asymptomatic patients, testing may be appropriate when there is a high-risk clinical situation (eg, diabetes or multiple risk factors) (22). Patients with a more than 20% 10-year risk of developing coronary heart disease are considered to be at high risk in current National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines (37).

11. Obese patients
Very obese patients constitute a special problem because most imaging tables used for SPECT have weight-bearing limits (often 300 lb [135 kg]) that preclude imaging very heavy subjects. These subjects can still be imaged by planar scintigraphy.

12. Diabetes
The increasing recognition of diabetes mellitus as a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (38) has heightened interest in myocardial perfusion imaging for CAD diagnosis and risk stratification. Available studies are based on retrospective analyses of patients referred to the nuclear cardiology laboratory (24,39,40). Prospective information in asymptomatic diabetic patients drawn from the general diabetic population is awaited (41). Currently available studies indicate that (1) 99mTc-sestamibi myocardial perfusion SPECT has comparable sensitivity, specificity, and normalcy rates for the diagnosis of CAD in diabetic and nondiabetic patients; (2) risk-adjusted event-free survival in patients with mildly and moderately to severely abnormal scans is worse in patients with diabetes than in those without diabetes; (3) the presence and extent of myocardial perfusion SPECT abnormality is an independent predictor of cardiac death alone, or of cardiac death and MI, in patients with or without diabetes; and (4) diabetic women have the worst outcome for any given extent of reversible myocardial defect.

13. After coronary calcium screening
Although some patients can benefit from nuclear stress testing after electron-beam CT, it would clearly not be cost-effective for all patients with atherosclerosis according to electron-beam CT to go on to the more expensive nuclear cardiology testing. In general, when the electron-beam CT score is higher than the 75th percentile for age and sex, stress nuclear testing may sometimes be appropriate for purposes of risk stratification.

14. Before and after revascularization
a. Radionuclide imaging before revascularization interventions
When there is uncertainty with regard to the appropriate choice of therapy after coronary angiography, stress nuclear testing can risk stratify 25% to 75% lesions usefully (42).

b. Radionuclide imaging after percutaneous coronary intervention
The ACC/AHA 2002 Guideline Update for Exercise Testing (22) summarizes the available information on exercise testing after percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Symptom status is an unreliable index of development of restenosis, with 25% of asymptomatic patients documented as having ischemia on exercise testing. Myocardial perfusion imaging can be helpful in appropriately selected patients. The major indication for perfusion imaging in patients after successful PCI is to evaluate symptoms suggesting new disease.

c. Radionuclide imaging after coronary artery bypass graft surgery
Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy can be useful in determining the location, extent, and severity of ischemia. Prognostic value has been demonstrated both early (43) and late (44,45) after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery.

15. Radionuclide imaging before noncardiac surgery
The ACC/AHA Guideline Update for Perioperative Cardiac Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery (46) (http://www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/perio/update/pdf/perio_update.pdf) has emphasized the importance of clinical, demographic, and surgical indicators of risk. In general, noninvasive preoperative testing is best directed at patients considered to be at intermediate clinical risk (diabetes, stable CAD, compensated heart failure) who are scheduled to undergo intermediate- or high-risk surgery. A thorough evaluation of appropriately selected patients will also afford an assessment of cardiac prognosis over the long term. Exercise stress is preferred in patients capable of achieving adequate workloads; radionuclide techniques should be reserved for patients whose baseline ECGs render exercise interpretation invalid or who require pharmacologic stress because of the inability to exercise.

a. Myocardial perfusion imaging
The full-text guideline summarizes studies of perfusion imaging in the preoperative assessment of cardiac risk for vascular and nonvascular surgery (see Table 14 in the full-text guideline). For patients with radionuclide evidence of ischemia, the positive predictive value of such testing is uniformly low, in the range of 4% to 20%. The negative predictive value of a normal scan, however, is very high (96% to 100%). Patients with reversible defects are at greater risk for perioperative ischemia than are those with fixed defects; the latter defects may, in turn, be a marker for longer-term risk. The positive predictive value of perfusion imaging can be improved when testing is applied selectively to patients with a higher pretest likelihood of CAD and when the results are integrated into a clinical risk assessment. If a noninvasive assessment of ischemic jeopardy before noncardiac surgery is necessary, the choice between radionuclide stress perfusion imaging and dobutamine stress echocardiography should be made on the basis of institutional expertise and patient-specific attributes.

b. Radionuclide ventriculography
Exercise radionuclide ventriculography is rarely performed to assess ischemic jeopardy before noncardiac surgery. The evaluation of resting LV function, however, is an important component of the preoperative assessment of patients with symptoms and/or signs of heart failure. LV systolic function is now routinely assessed with gated SPECT techniques at the time of myocardial perfusion imaging. Not unexpectedly, the risk of perioperative complications is highest among patients with a resting LVEF more than 0.35. Reduced LV systolic function is a predictor of perioperative heart failure but bears no consistent correlation with the risk of perioperative ischemia.

D. Recommendations.  

  1. Cardiac Stress Myocardial Perfusion SPECT in Patients Able to Exercise: Recommendations for Diagnosis of Patients With an Intermediate Likelihood of CAD and/or Risk Stratification of Patients With an Intermediate or High Likelihood of CAD Who Are Able to Exercise (to at least 85% of Maximal Predicted Heart Rate)
    Class I
    1. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT to identify the extent, severity, and location of ischemia in patients who do not have LBBB or an electronically-paced ventricular rhythm but do have a baseline ECG abnormality that interferes with the interpretation of exercise-induced ST-segment changes (ventricular pre-excitation, LVH, digoxin therapy, or more than 1-mm ST depression). (Level of Evidence: B)
    2. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT in patients with LBBB or electronically-paced ventricular rhythm. (Level of Evidence: B)
    3. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT to assess the functional significance of intermediate (25% to 75%) coronary lesions. (Level of Evidence: B)
    4. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT in patients with intermediate Duke treadmill score. (Level of Evidence: B)
    5. Repeat exercise myocardial perfusion imaging after initial perfusion imaging in patients whose symptoms have changed to redefine the risk for cardiac event. (Level of Evidence: C)

    Class IIa
    1. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT at 3 to 5 years after revascularization (either PCI or CABG) in selected high-risk asymptomatic patients. (Level of Evidence: B)
    2. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT as the initial test in patients who are considered to be at high risk (patients with diabetes or patients otherwise defined as having a more than 20% 10-year risk of a coronary heart disease event). (Level of Evidence: B)

    Class IIb
    1. Repeat exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT 1 to 3 years after initial perfusion imaging in patients with known or a high likelihood of CAD and stable symptoms and a predicted annual mortality of more than 1% to redefine the risk of a cardiac event. (Level of Evidence: C)
    2. Repeat exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT on cardiac active medications after initial abnormal perfusion imaging to assess the efficacy of medical therapy. (Level of Evidence: C)
    3. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT in symptomatic or asymptomatic patients who have severe coronary calcification (CT coronary calcium score more than the 75th percentile for age and sex) in the presence on the resting ECG of pre-excitation [Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome] or more than 1 mm ST-segment depression. (Level of Evidence: B)
    4. Exercise myocardial perfusion SPECT in asymptomatic patients who have a high-risk occupation. (Level of Evidence: B)


  2. Cardiac Stress Myocardial Perfusion SPECT in Patients Unable to Exercise: Recommendations for Diagnosis of Patients With an Intermediate Likelihood of CAD and/or Risk Stratification of Patients With an Intermediate or High Likelihood of CAD Who Are Unable to Exercise.
    Class I
    1. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT to identify the extent, severity, and location of ischemia. (Level of Evidence: B)
    2. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT to assess the functional significance of intermediate (25% to 75%) coronary lesions. (Level of Evidence: B)
    3. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT after initial perfusion imaging in patients whose symptoms have changed to redefine the risk for cardiac event. (Level of Evidence: C)

    Class IIa
    1. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT at 3 to 5 years after revascularization (either PCI or CABG) in selected high-risk asymptomatic patients. (Level of Evidence: B)
    2. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT as the initial test in patients who are considered to be at high risk (patients with diabetes or patients otherwise defined as having a more than 20% 10-year risk of a coronary heart disease event). (Level of Evidence: B)
    3. Dobutamine myocardial perfusion SPECT in patients who have a contraindication to adenosine or dipyridamole. (Level of Evidence: C)

    Class IIb
    1. Repeat adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion imaging 1 to 3 years after initial perfusion imaging in patients with known or a high likelihood of CAD and stable symptoms, and a predicted annual mortality of more than 1%, to redefine the risk of a cardiac event. (Level of Evidence: C)
    2. Repeat adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT on cardiac active medications after initial abnormal perfusion imaging to assess the efficacy of medical therapy. (Level of Evidence: C)
    3. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT in symptomatic or asymptomatic patients who have severe coronary calcification (CT Coronary Calcium Score more than the 75th percentile for age and sex) in the presence on the resting ECG of LBBB or an electronically-paced ventricular rhythm. (Level of Evidence: B)
    4. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion SPECT in asymptomatic patients who have a high-risk occupation. (Level of Evidence: C)


  3. Cardiac Stress Myocardial Perfusion PET: Recommendations for Diagnosis of Patients With an Intermediate Likelihood of CAD and/or Risk Stratification of Patients With an Intermediate or High Likelihood of CAD
    Class I
    1. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion PET in patients in whom an appropriately indicated myocardial perfusion SPECT study has been found to be equivocal for diagnostic or risk stratification purposes. (Level of Evidence: B)

    Class IIa
    1. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion PET to identify the extent, severity, and location of ischemia as the initial diagnostic test in patients who are unable to exercise. (Level of Evidence: B)
    2. Adenosine or dipyridamole myocardial perfusion PET to identify the extent, severity, and location of ischemia as the initial diagnostic test in patients who are able to exercise but have LBBB or an electronically-paced rhythm. (Level of Evidence: B)


  4. Cardiac Stress Perfusion Imaging Before Noncardiac Surgery: Recommendations
    Class I
    1. Initial diagnosis of CAD in patients with intermediate pretest probability of disease and abnormal baseline ECG1 or inability to exercise. (Level of Evidence: B)
    2. Prognostic assessment of patients undergoing initial evaluation for suspected or proven CAD with abnormal baseline ECG1 or inability to exercise. (Level of Evidence: B)
    3. Evaluation of patients following a change in clinical status (eg, ACS) with abnormal baseline ECG1 or inability to exercise. (Level of Evidence: B)
    4. Initial diagnosis of CAD in patients with LBBB and intermediate pretest probability of disease, when used in conjunction with vasodilator stress. (Level of Evidence: B)
    5. Prognostic assessment of patients with LBBB undergoing initial evaluation for suspected or proven CAD, when used in conjunction with vasodilator stress. (Level of Evidence: B)
    6. Assessment of patients with intermediate or minor clinical risk predictors2 and poor functional capacity (less than 4 METS) who require high-risk noncardiac surgery3, when used in conjunction with pharmacologic stress. (Level of Evidence: C)
    7. Assessment of patients with intermediate clinical risk predictors2, abnormal baseline ECGs1, and moderate or excellent functional capacity (more than 4 METS) who require high-risk noncardiac surgery. (Level of Evidence: C)

    Class IIb
    1. Routine assessment of active, asymptomatic patients who have remained stable for up to 5 years after CABG surgery. (Level of Evidence: C)
    2. Routine evaluation of active asymptomatic patients who have remained stable for up to 2 years after previous abnormal coronary angiography or noninvasive assessment of myocardial perfusion. (Level of Evidence: C)
    3. Diagnosis of restenosis and regional ischemia in active asymptomatic patients within weeks to months after PCI. (Level of Evidence: C)
    4. Initial diagnosis or prognostic assessment of CAD in patients with right bundle-branch block or less than 1-mm ST depression on resting ECG. (Level of Evidence: C)

    Class III
    1. Routine screening of asymptomatic men or women with low pretest likelihood of CAD. (Level of Evidence: C)
    2. Evaluation of patients with severe comorbidities that limit life expectancy or candidacy for myocardial revascularization. (Level of Evidence: C)
    3. Initial diagnosis or prognostic assessment of CAD in patients who require emergency noncardiac surgery. (Level of Evidence: C)



    IV. Heart failure
 Top
 Table of contents
 I. Introduction
 II. Acute syndromes
 III. Chronic syndromes
 IV. Heart failure
 References
 
A. Introduction.   The clinical syndrome of heart failure in adults is commonly associated with the etiologies of ischemic and nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypertensive heart disease, and valvular heart disease. Common principles of assessment that influence prognosis and therapy include the assessment of (1) LV function and remodeling, (2) the contribution of myocardial ischemia due to CAD, and (3) myocardial viability.

B. Assessment of LV function.   1. Assessment of LV systolic dysfunction
The clinician’s choice of noninvasive imaging modality to detect and quantify LV systolic dysfunction in the individual patient with heart failure depends on several variables, including cost, ease of access at point-of-care, need for precise computed quantitative measurement, and local expertise. RNA can be used to compute quantitative estimates of LV, as well as RV, EF, and absolute volumes. A strength of RNA is that the quantitative computation of EF and chamber volumes does not depend on mathematical assumptions of ventricular geometry. Thus, radionuclide quantitative computations of LV chamber volume and EF are obtainable in {approx}100% of patients. The long biological half-life of 99mTc-labeled blood pool agents in gated equilibrium studies also permits serial acquisition of data at rest and during exercise.

2. Assessment of LV diastolic dysfunction
The objective determination of the presence and severity of diastolic dysfunction is increasingly important in patients with the clinical syndrome of heart failure. The rate of change of counts in diastole can be analyzed to calculate indices of diastolic filling, including the peak LV filling rate, time to peak filling, and atrial contribution to filling. In contemporary practice, Doppler blood flow velocity indices of transmitral flow are more commonly used to assess LV diastolic filling parameters. Large population-based criteria, adjusted for age and sex, for normal versus abnormal diastolic function using RNA have not yet been established.

C. Assessment of CAD.   1. Importance of detecting CAD in heart failure patients
Determining whether LV dysfunction is caused predominantly by the consequences of CAD or by one of the many other etiologies included in the term "nonischemic" cardiomyopathy is a critical early step in the management of heart failure patients. Decisions about the need for cardiac catheterization and coronary angiography will be informed by the initial clinical and noninvasive assessment of these patients. A significant subgroup of patients with heart failure and underlying CAD has a potentially reversible degree of LV dysfunction with revascularization.

2. Myocardial perfusion imaging to detect CAD in heart failure patients
The sensitivity and negative predictive value of myocardial perfusion imaging in detecting CAD in patients with heart failure and LV dysfunction have been excellent in published studies. However, it is not clear how these studies, some of which involved relatively small numbers of patients and older techniques, may generalize to current patients and contemporary imaging techniques. The specificity of perfusion imaging to rule out coronary disease is modest, on the average 40% to 50%. The frequent false-positive studies are due to perfusion abnormalities in a significant number of patients with "nonischemic" cardiomyopathy, ie, those patients without epicardial coronary disease. Table 4 lists recommendations for radionuclide imaging in patients with heart failure.


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TABLE 4 Recommendations for the Use of Radionuclide Imaging in Patients With Heart Failure: Fundamental Assessment

 
D. Assessment of myocardial viability.   1. Goals of assessing myocardial viability
In patients with chronic coronary disease and LV dysfunction, an important subpopulation exists in which revascularization may significantly improve regional or global LV function, as well as symptoms and potentially natural history. The underlying pathophysiology involves reversible myocardial dysfunction (hibernation or stunning). Meta-analysis of a substantial body of literature indicates that those with evidence of preserved myocardial viability who underwent revascularization had a substantial reduction in the risk of death during long-term follow-up (47). If nonviability was predominant, the risk of death was intermediate and not affected by revascularization. These conclusions, however, are limited by lack of randomization and the fact that observational cohorts analyses are subject to selection biases.

2. General principles of assessing myocardial viability by radionuclide techniques
Preservation of myocardial viability exists as a spectrum in a territory with regional ventricular dysfunction, from the possibility of no preserved viability (ie, complete transmural infarction) to completely preserved viability (ie, transmural hibernation or stunning with the potential for full recovery of function). Most studies evaluating the radionuclide techniques for assessing viability have focused on analysis of resting tracer uptake (as with 201Tl, sestamibi, or tetrofosmin) or evidence of preserved metabolic activity at rest (by 18F-2-fluorodeoxyglucose [FDG] or 11C-acetate).

3. Techniques and protocols for assessing myocardial viability
a. 201Tl stress redistribution
The uptake of 201Tl is an energy-dependent process requiring intact cell membrane integrity, and the presence of 201Tl implies preserved myocyte cellular viability. The redistribution properties of 201Tl have been used as an important marker of myocardial viability in stress imaging followed by a 3- to 4-hour redistribution image. The presence of a reversible perfusion defect and/or preserved 201Tl uptake on the 3- to 4-hour redistribution images is an important sign of regional viability.

b. 201Tl reinjection
The 2 most widely studied protocols for assessing viability in the presence of an inconclusive result on initial stress/redistribution imaging involve 201Tl reinjection and late redistribution imaging. The presence of a severe 201Tl defect after reinjection identifies areas with a very low probability of improvement in function.

c. Late redistribution imaging
Although improvement in uptake on late redistribution images (24 to 48 hours after the initial stress 201Tl injection) has good positive predictive value for identifying regions with potential improvement in function, the negative predictive value is suboptimal in some patients.

d. 201Tl rest redistribution
The identification of a "reversible resting defect" (in 3- to 4-hour versus 15- to 20-minute images) generally reflects preserved viability. The finding appears to be an insensitive though specific sign of potential improvement in regional function.

e. 99mTc-sestamibi and tetrofosmin
Although the 99mTc-based tracers sestamibi and tetrofosmin do not share the redistribution properties of 201Tl, their performance characteristics for predicting improvement in regional function after revascularization appear to be similar to those seen with 201Tl.

f. PET imaging
Positron tracers of blood flow and metabolism have been extensively studied for evaluation of myocardial viability. The most commonly used PET protocol involves evaluation of myocardial glucose metabolism with 18F-FDG in conjunction with PET or SPECT examination of MBF with 13N-ammonia or 99mTc-sestamibi, respectively. This approach appears to have slightly better overall accuracy for predicting recovery of regional function after revascularization than do single-photon techniques (48). The magnitude of improvement in heart failure symptoms after revascularization in patients with LV dysfunction correlates with the preoperative extent of 18F-FDG "mismatch" pattern (49).

Table 5 lists recommendations for the use of radionuclide techniques to assess myocardial viability.

4. Image interpretation for myocardial viability: quantitative versus visual analysis of tracer activities
Whether quantitative analysis of tracer uptake in radionuclide techniques is required for assessing viability is not established. Visual analyses need to be at least semiquantitative, accounting for defect severity.

5. Comparison of techniques
All radionuclide techniques (and dobutamine echocardiography) perform in a relatively similar manner with regard to positive and negative predictive values for predicting improvements in regional function (48). A meta-analysis of outcome studies related to myocardial viability has demonstrated no difference among techniques commonly used to assess viability (PET versus single-photon radionuclide versus dobutamine echocardiography) with regard to reduction of mortality or unfavorable cardiac events after revascularization (47).

E. Etiologies of heart failure.   1. Dilated cardiomyopathy
Table 6 lists recommendations for the use of radionuclide imaging to diagnose specific causes of dilated cardiomyopathy.

2. Dilated cardiomyopathy due to doxorubicin/anthracycline cardiotoxicity
RNA is an ideal noninvasive tool to provide longitudinal quantitative assessment of LV function in patients receiving doxorubicin and other anthracyclines such as epirubicin. EF should be measured in all patients before receiving doxorubicin; those with pre-existing heart disease and/or LV dysfunction are at greater risk of congestive heart failure. Continued use of doxorubicin after LV dysfunction has developed causes progressive chamber dilatation and deterioration in systolic function. Therapy with trastuzumab, a monoclonal antibody directed against the HER2 receptor, may increase the risk of developing heart failure during standard-dose doxorubicin therapy (50). Radionuclide evaluation of EF is also important in monitoring the cardioprotective effects of agents such as dexrazoxane when doxorubicin is used in high dosages for solid malignant tumors (51).

3. Dilated cardiomyopathy due to myocarditis
Radioisotope imaging has been reported to identify myocarditis of diverse etiologies with gallium (which detects inflammation), antimyosin antibody (which detects myocardial necrosis and is myosin specific), and metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG; which assesses adrenergic neuronal function). The usefulness of radionuclide imaging to detect myocarditis in heart failure patients is not well established, however, and data describing use of this approach are based on nonrandomized studies.

4. Posttransplantation rejection and allograft vasculopathy
111In antimyosin antibody imaging has been described as a technique to detect rejection after cardiac transplantation in small observational studies. Because of many false-positive results, endomyocardial biopsy continues to be the technique of choice for serial monitoring and detection of acute rejection. Radionuclide evaluation of allograft vasculopathy, the major limitation for long-term survival in transplant recipients, is limited by variable sensitivity and specificity. A SPECT study with no reversible perfusion defects may be useful in excluding coronary lesions appropriate for revascularization (52).

5. Chagas myocarditis and/or cardiomyopathy
Chagas myocarditis and/or cardiomyopathy has several distinctive features in comparison with dilated cardiomyopathy due to presumed viral myocarditis. Observational studies using RNA and perfusion imaging have reported that chronic Chagas cardiomyopathy is frequently associated with LV regional wall motion abnormalities and perfusion defects in the absence of epicardial CAD, and RV dyssynergy is common in asymptomatic patients with no other clinical signs of heart failure (53). In correlative investigations, there has been a topographic association between regional defects in sympathetic denervation detected by 123I-MIBG imaging and perfusion defects detected by 201Tl imaging (54).

6. Sarcoid heart disease
Myocardial SPECT with 99mTc-sestamibi has been used to detect myocardial involvement in patients with sarcoidosis. Perfusion defects are more common in the RV than the in LV and correlate with atrioventricular block, heart failure, and ventricular tachycardia of RV origin (55). These defects are frequently reversible, which makes it unlikely that they represent deposition of granulomata or fibrosis. 67Ga was formerly used in sarcoidosis as a marker of the activity and extent of the disease and for predicting the efficacy of corticosteroids, but it has been largely superseded by serial chest CT and pulmonary function tests.

7. Cardiac amyloidosis
Radionuclide angiography enables assessment of diastolic and systolic function, including peak filling rates and LV filling volumes during rapid filling and atrial contraction, respectively (56). 131I-MIBG imaging has indicated a high incidence of sympathetically denervated but viable myocardium (57). Although 99mTc-pyrophosphate imaging has been reported to have diagnostic utility, echocardiography appears to be more useful because it enables complete characterization of the altered LV and RV myocardium, as well as valvular and pericardial involvement.

8. RV dysplasia
The RV in arrhythmogenic RV dysplasia is characterized by marked dilatation and depressed EF, which can be readily identified with RV RNA (58).

9. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Radionuclide angiographic studies are not usually indicated in the diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Chest pain is a frequent symptom, raising the possibility of coexistent CAD. However, fixed and reversible exercise-induced myocardial perfusion defects suggesting scar or ischemia occur in the absence of significant epicardial coronary artery stenoses. Reversible perfusion defects may reflect ischemia related to diminished coronary flow reserve or decreased sympathoneural function in hypertrophied areas. Table 7 lists recommendations for the use of radionuclide imaging to evaluate hypertrophic heart disease.

10. Hypertensive heart disease
RNA allows recognition of abnormal diastolic and systolic function in hypertensive subjects, even when resting systolic global function and regional function are normal. A significant proportion of such patients have hypertensive hypertrophic heart disease.

Hypertension is common in patients presenting with chest pain for stress testing in whom CAD is suspected. The role of stress perfusion imaging in patients with and without LVH has been covered in the section on Chronic Syndromes.

11. Valvular heart disease
a. Diagnosis and risk stratification
In daily practice, 2D Doppler echocardiography studies have become the modality of choice for diagnosing valvular heart disease. The potential usefulness of RNA in assessing valvular heart disease stems from the ability of RNA to quantify LV and RV function. In addition, myocardial perfusion imaging has been used to examine for the presence of flow-limiting coronary disease, especially in aortic stenosis.

b. Aortic stenosis
Because of the lack of specificity and sensitivity of angina for the concomitant presence of coronary disease in aortic stenosis, there has been much interest in the use of myocardial perfusion imaging in preoperative evaluation. The sensitivity and specificity of stress perfusion are relatively good but probably not adequate for patients about to undergo valve surgery. Thus, in practice, perfusion imaging has not supplanted coronary angiography in the preoperative work-up of patients with aortic stenosis.

c. Aortic regurgitation
The most promising use of RNA in valvular heart disease initially appeared to be in the evaluation of patients with aortic regurgitation, in whom a failure of EF to rise during exercise seemed to mark the onset of LV dysfunction and predict a poorer prognosis or indicate that the asymptomatic patient would soon become symptomatic (59). Subsequent studies indicated that exercise angiography does not usually add additional prognostic information to the measurement of resting LVEF and end-systolic dimension in predicting the response to aortic valve replacement (60). Enhanced prognostic ability of exercise RNA has been reported when the calculation of systolic wall stress is added (61).

d. Mitral regurgitation
Perhaps the most compelling current use of RNA in valvular heart disease is in the preoperative evaluation of patients with mitral regurgitation. The echocardiogram does not evaluate RV function well, whereas RV function assessment is a strength of RNA. As with aortic regurgitation, resting EF is a useful guide to valve repair or replacement. Again, however, Doppler echocardiography can make this assessment and add other anatomic and prognostic information. RNA is useful postoperatively in gauging changes in LV and RV performance. Table 8 lists recommendations for the use of radionuclide imaging in valvular heart disease.


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TABLE 8 Recommendations for the Use of Radionuclide Imaging in Valvular Heart Disease

 
12. Adults with congenital heart disease
As in other forms of heart disease, RNA can be used effectively to assess RV and LV systolic performance. In addition, left-to-right shunting causes persistently high levels of activity in the lung or RV during FPRNA because of early recirculation. The resultant time-activity curve can be used to calculate pulmonary to systemic flow ratios. The early appearance of tracer in the left chambers of the heart can be used to detect right-to-left shunts. 99mTc RNA appears to be useful in evaluating abnormal lung flow after the Fontan and Glenn procedures (62).

In general, however, radionuclide studies are now utilized infrequently in assessing congenital heart disease and are unlikely to be accurate if performed only occasionally. Table 9 lists recommendations for the use of radionuclide imaging in adults with congenital heart disease.


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TABLE 9 Recommendations for the Use of Radionuclide Imaging in Adults With Congenital Heart Disease

 


    Footnotes
 
4 The ACC/AHA Task Force on Practice Guidelines makes every effort to avoid any actual or potential conflicts of interest that might arise as a result of an outside relationship or personal interest of a member of the writing panel. Specifically, all members of the writing panel are asked to provide disclosure statements of all such relationships that might be perceived as real or potential conflicts of interest. These statements are reviewed by the parent task force, reported orally to all members of the writing panel at the first meeting, and updated as changes occur. Back

5 This document was approved by the American College of Cardiology Foundation Board of Trustees in July, 2003, the American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee in July, 2003, and the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology Board of Directors in July, 2003. Back

6 When citing this document, the American College of Cardiology Foundation, the American Heart Association, and the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology request that the following citation format be used: Klocke FJ, Baird MG, Bateman TM, Berman DS, Carabello BA, Cerqueira MD, DeMaria AN, Kennedy JW, Lorell BH, Messer JV, O’Gara PT, Russell RO Jr, St. John Sutton MG, Udelson JE, Verani MS, Williams KA. ACC/AHA/ASNC guidelines for the clinical use of cardiac radionuclide imaging—executive summary: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (ACC/AHA/ASNC Committee to Revise the 1995 Guidelines for the Clinical Use of Radionuclide Imaging). J Am Coll Cardiol 2003;42:1318–33. Back

7 (J Am Coll Cardiol 2003;42:1318–33) Back

8 ©2003 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc. Back

* Deceased. Back

{dagger} Former Task Force Member. Back

{ddagger} Former Task Force Chair. Back

1 Baseline ECG abnormalities that interfere with interpretation of exercise-induced ST-segment changes include LBBB, ventricular pre-excitation, ventricular pacing, LVH with repolarization changes, more than 1-mm ST depression, and digoxin therapy. Back

2 As defined in the ACC/AHA Guideline Update for Perioperative Cardiovascular Evaluation for Noncardiac Surgery (46), intermediate clinical risk predictors include mild angina, prior MI, compensated or prior heart failure, diabetes, and renal insufficiency. Minor clinical risk predictors include advanced age, abnormal ECG, rhythm other than sinus, low functional capacity, history of cerebrovascular accident, and uncontrolled hypertension. Back

3 High-risk surgery is defined by emergent operations (particularly in the elderly), aortic and other major vascular surgery, peripheral vascular surgery, and other prolonged operations in which major fluid shifts are anticipated (ie, reported cardiac risk often more than 5%). Back


    References
 Top
 Table of contents
 I. Introduction
 II. Acute syndromes
 III. Chronic syndromes
 IV. Heart failure
 References
 
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