0
selected
-
1.
The effects of pharmacological interventions, exercise, and dietary supplements on extra-cardiac radioactivity in myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography imaging.
Molavipordanjani, S, Abedi, SM, Hosseinimehr, SJ, Fatahian, A, Mardanshahi, A
Nuclear medicine communications. 2020;(9):841-847
Abstract
Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) as an imaging modality plays a key role in the monitoring of patients with cardiovascular disease. MPI enables the assessment of cardiovascular disease, the effectiveness of therapy, and viable myocardial tissue. However, MPI suffers from some downfalls and limitations, which can influence its clinical applications. These limitations can arise from the patient's condition, equipment, or the actions of the technologist. In this review, we mainly focused on the different effective parameters on radioactivity uptake of organs including liver, intestines, stomach, and gall bladder and how they affect the quality of the acquired images in nuclear medicine. More importantly, we cover how different suggested medicines, foods and exercise alleviative this problem.
-
2.
Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction: Clinical Considerations and Noninvasive Diagnosis.
Schindler, TH, Dilsizian, V
JACC. Cardiovascular imaging. 2020;(1 Pt 1):140-155
Abstract
Chest pain in patients without obstructive coronary artery disease has been realized as a frequent problem encountered in clinical practice. Invasive flow investigations have suggested that up to two-thirds of patients with nonobstructive coronary atherosclerosis may have microvascular dysfunction (MVD). Positron emission tomography myocardial perfusion imaging in conjunction with tracer-kinetic modeling enables the concurrent quantification of myocardial blood flow (MBF) in milliliters per minute per gram of tissue. This allows the assessment of hyperemic MBFs and myocardial flow reserve for the noninvasive identification and characterization of MVD as an important functional substrate for angina symptoms amenable to intensified and individualized medical intervention with nitrates, calcium-channel blockers, statins, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, and/or angiotensin II type 1 receptor blockers. Recent investigations suggest that cardiac magnetic resonance and computed tomography may also be suitable for the noninvasive detection of MVD. Whether intensified and individualized treatment related improvement or even normalization of hyperemic MBF and/or myocardial flow reserve may lead to a persistent reduction in angina symptoms and/or improved cardiovascular outcome as compared to standard care, deserves further testing in large-scale randomized clinical trials.
-
3.
Assessment of Left Ventricular Myocardial Diseases with Cardiac Computed Tomography.
Ko, SM, Kim, TH, Chun, EJ, Kim, JY, Hwang, SH
Korean journal of radiology. 2019;(3):333-351
Abstract
Rapid advances in cardiac computed tomography (CT) have enabled the characterization of left ventricular (LV) myocardial diseases based on LV anatomical morphology, function, density, and enhancement pattern. Global LV function and regional wall motion can be evaluated using multi-phasic cine CT images. CT myocardial perfusion imaging facilitates the identification of hemodynamically significant coronary artery disease. CT delayed-enhancement imaging is used to detect myocardial scar in myocardial infarction and to measure the extracellular volume fraction in non-ischemic cardiomyopathy. Multi-energy cardiac CT allows the mapping of iodine distribution in the myocardium. This review summarizes the current techniques of cardiac CT for LV myocardial assessment, highlights the key findings in various myocardial diseases, and presents future applications to complement echocardiography and cardiovascular magnetic resonance.
-
4.
Effects of Caffeine on Myocardial Blood Flow: A Systematic Review.
van Dijk, R, Ties, D, Kuijpers, D, van der Harst, P, Oudkerk, M
Nutrients. 2018;(8)
Abstract
Caffeine is one of the most widely consumed stimulants worldwide. It is a well-recognized antagonist of adenosine and a potential cause of false-negative functional measurements during vasodilator myocardial perfusion. The aim of this systematic review is to summarize the evidence regarding the effects of caffeine intake on functional measurements of myocardial perfusion in patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Pubmed, Web of Science, and Embase were searched using a predefined electronic search strategy. Participants-healthy subjects or patients with known or suspected CAD. Comparisons-recent caffeine intake versus no caffeine intake. Outcomes-measurements of functional myocardial perfusion. Study design-observational. Fourteen studies were deemed eligible for this systematic review. There was a wide range of variability in study design with varying imaging modalities, vasodilator agents, serum concentrations of caffeine, and primary outcome measurements. The available data indicate a significant influence of recent caffeine intake on cardiac perfusion measurements during adenosine and dipyridamole induced hyperemia. These effects have the potential to affect the clinical decision making by re-classification to different risk-categories.
-
5.
Clinical imaging in dementia with Lewy bodies.
Surendranathan, A, O'Brien, JT
Evidence-based mental health. 2018;(2):61-65
-
-
Free full text
-
Abstract
Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a common neurodegenerative dementia in older people; however, the clinical features, particularly cognitive fluctuations and rapid eye movement sleep disorder, are often hard to elicit, leading to difficulty in making the diagnosis clinically. Here we examine the literature for the evidence behind imaging modalities that could assist in making the diagnosis. Dopamine transporter (DAT) imaging remains the best modality for differentiation from dementia of Alzheimer's type with high sensitivity and specificity reported based on pathological diagnoses. 123Iodine-metaiodobenzylguanidine myocardial scintigraphy (MIBG) however is rapidly becoming an alternative imaging modality for the diagnosis of DLB, though studies assessing its accuracy with postmortem verification are still awaited. However, there are suggestions that MIBG may be better in the differentiation of vascular parkinsonism from DLB than DAT scans but may have lower sensitivity for detecting DLB compared with the 80% sensitivity seen in DAT imaging. Structural MRI scans have long been used for the diagnosis of dementia; however, their utility in DLB is limited to revealing the presence of coexisting Alzheimer's disease. Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET is an alternative biomarker that can also differentiate Alzheimer's disease and DLB but lacks the evidence base of both DAT and MIBG scans.
-
6.
The Synergistic Use of Coronary Artery Calcium Imaging and Noninvasive Myocardial Perfusion Imaging for Detecting Subclinical Atherosclerosis and Myocardial Ischemia.
Rozanski, A, Berman, DS
Current cardiology reports. 2018;(7):59
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW This review aims to assess the synergistic use of coronary artery calcium (CAC) scanning and stress-rest SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) for the workup of patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). RECENT FINDINGS The CAC score bears a proportional relationship to both the frequency of obstructive CAD and inducible ischemia. Consequently, the test can be used to improve the Bayesian assessment of pre-test CAD likelihood and assist in triaging patients for stress testing. The CAC score and MPI findings are synergistic for predicting cardiac risk, which increases for patients with abnormal MPI studies who also have CAC abnormality. CAC scanning also improves the diagnostic sensitivity of SPECT-MPI by identifying normal SPECT-MPI patients with subclinical atherosclerosis. Finally, CAC scanning helps improve the interpretation of borderline SPECT-MPI scan abnormalities. Combined, these findings indicate a clear benefit for incorporating CAC scanning into the diagnostic workup of patients who are candidates for the evaluation of chest pain symptoms by SPECT-MPI.
-
7.
Research Progress on 18F-Labeled Agents for Imaging of Myocardial Perfusion with Positron Emission Tomography.
Mou, T, Zhang, X
Molecules (Basel, Switzerland). 2017;(4)
Abstract
Coronary artery disease (CAD) is the leading cause of death in the world. Myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) plays a significant role in non-invasive diagnosis and prognosis of CAD. However, neither single-photon emission computed tomography nor positron emission tomography clinical MPI agents can absolutely satisfy the demands of clinical practice. In the past decades, tremendous developments happened in the field of 18F-labeled MPI tracers. This review summarizes the current state of 18F-labeled MPI tracers, basic research data of those tracers, and the future direction of MPI tracer research.
-
8.
CT myocardial perfusion imaging: current status and future perspectives.
Yang, DH, Kim, YH
The international journal of cardiovascular imaging. 2017;(7):1009-1020
Abstract
Computed tomography myocardial perfusion (CTP) combined with coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) may constitute a "1-stop shop" for the noninvasive diagnosis of hemodynamically significant coronary stenosis during a single CT examination. CTP shows high diagnostic performance and provides incremental value over CCTA for the detection of hemodynamically significant coronary stenosis in patients with a high Agatston calcium score or coronary artery stents. Future studies should determine the optimal protocol and clinical value of CTP for guiding revascularization strategy and prognostication. In this article, we review the current status and future perspectives of CTP, focusing on technical considerations, clinical applications, and future research topics.
-
9.
New solid state cadmium-zinc-telluride technology for cardiac single photon emission computed tomographic myocardial perfusion imaging.
Alenazy, AB, Wells, RG, Ruddy, TD
Expert review of medical devices. 2017;(3):213-222
Abstract
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) is well established as diagnostic test for patients with suspected or known coronary artery disease. New camera systems have been developed with cadmium-zinc-telluride (CZT) detectors, novel collimator designs and reconstruction software. Areas covered: We review the current state of cardiac SPECT, advances in conventional camera technology and the development and clinical validation of solid-state CZT cameras. Expert commentary: The development of CZT systems is timely and addresses current issues for clinical SPECT imaging. These systems have a significant increase in photon sensitivity, permitting much lower radiation patient doses at a time when the lay and medical communities are very concerned about the radiation doses resulting from medical imaging. The increased count sensitivity permits shorter acquisition times and greater patient throughput which may address the ongoing and increasing issue of decreased funding for healthcare and, particularly, diagnostic imaging. The improved image resolution should improve diagnostic accuracy and increase the value of SPECT imaging for management of patients with CAD at a time of significant competition from other imaging modalities.
-
10.
Topics of nuclear medicine research in Europe.
Inubushi, M, Kaneta, T, Ishimori, T, Imabayashi, E, Okizaki, A, Oku, N
Annals of nuclear medicine. 2017;(8):571-574
-
-
Free full text
-
Abstract
Last year in the European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, we introduced some recent nuclear medicine research conducted in Japan. This was favorably received by European readers in the main. This year we wish to focus on the Annals of Nuclear Medicine on some of the fine nuclear medicine research work executed in Europe recently. In the current review article, we take up five topics: prostate-specific membrane antigen imaging, recent advances in radionuclide therapy, [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron-emission tomography (PET) for dementia, quantitative PET assessment of myocardial perfusion, and iodine-124 (124I). Just at the most recent annual meeting of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine 2016, Kyoto was selected as the host city for the 2022 Congress of the World Federation of Nuclear Medicine and Biology. We hope that our continuous efforts to strengthen scientific cooperation between Europe and Japan will bring many European friends and a great success to the Kyoto meeting.