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Title: [Comparison of exercise thallium-201 perfusion scintigraphy and coronarography in the prognostic stratification of patients with post-infarction residual ischemia]. Author: Dalle Mule J, Soravia G, Da Rold A, Pellegrini P, Perelli R, Martinelli F, Sponga B, Burelli C, Zanuttini D. Journal: G Ital Cardiol; 1991 Sep; 21(9):939-55. PubMed ID: 1790832. Abstract: The goals of this study were: 1) to determine and compare the prognostic utility of exercise 201Thallium scintigraphy with coronary angiography in patients with residual ischemia at the symptom limited bicycle exercise testing performed at hospital discharge after a first uncomplicated acute myocardial infarction 2) to verify the ability of perfusion scintigraphy to identify better than coronary angiography a subset of these patients at low risk for future events, despite the ischemic response at the exercise stress testing. Accordingly, follow-up data were obtained prospectively for 72 consecutive patients with adequate left ventricular rest systolic function, and with exercise induced greater than or equal to 1 mm ST-segment depression and/or typical angina pectoris. A planar 201Thallium scintigraphy and coronary angiography were performed within 2 months after acute myocardial infarction. By 31 +/- 29 months 38 patients had no events, while 34 experienced a cardiac event: 3 died of cardiac causes, 2 had nonfatal recurrent myocardial infarction, 29 were rehospitalized for severe class III or IV angina pectoris (4 were treated medically, 25 were revascularized: 20 had coronary bypass surgery, 5 coronary angioplasty). Each of the 3 angiographic classification of coronary artery disease (number of vessels with greater than or equal to 70% reduction of luminal diameter, jeopardy score and Gensini score) accurately identified patients with subsequent cardiac event by Mantel and Cox analysis (respectively p = 0.01, p = 0.0000, p = 0.002). Among 201Thallium variables, the number of segments demonstrating redistribution on delayed images (p = 0.0000), the number of segments with persistent defect (p = 0.0003) and increased 201Thallium uptake by the lungs (p = 0.0100) effectively stratified the probability of survival by the same analysis. Furthermore, the number of perfusion defects, either transient or persistent, with exercise 201Thallium scintigraphy provide additive prognostic information to any of the 3 angiographic coronary artery disease classifications considered. On the contrary, when 201Thallium stress findings are known, coronary angiography data in general are not additive in risk stratification. 17 patients with no reversible perfusion defect remained stable at follow up (52 +/- 28 months) despite development of typical angina pectoris (11/17) and/or ischemic ST segment depression (12/17) during exercise testing.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]