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  • Title: Comparison of rest/exercise ECG, thallium-201 scans and radionuclide angiography in patients with suspected coronary artery disease.
    Author: Pfisterer ME, Williams RJ, Gordon DG, Swanson SM, Battler A, Ceretto WJ, Ashburn WL, Froelicher VF.
    Journal: Cardiology; 1980; 66(1):43-55. PubMed ID: 7388853.
    Abstract:
    The results of rest and exercise ECG, 201Tl myocardial perfusion imaging and equilibrium radionuclide angiography were analyzed in 71 consecutive patients referred for diagnosis or evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD). In 45 patients the diagnosis was established either by catheterization or typical history. In this group the overall sensitivity for rest/exercise ECG was 66%, for 201Tl scans 74%, for both combined 79% and for the ejection fraction response to exercise determined by radionuclide angiography 97%. If only the exercise response was considered, the corresponding sensitivity values were 58% (ECG), 50% (201Tl scans), 71% (ECG + 201Tl) and 97% (radionuclide angiography). The specificity for coronary artery disease was determined to be 71% for ECG, 86% for 201Tl scans and 42% for radionuclide angiography. All patients with false-positive results by radionuclide angiography had cardiomyopathies, thus this test has a high specificity for left ventricular dysfunction rather than for CAD alone. Criteria developed from the analysis of the test results in the 45 patients with definite diagnoses were then applied to the evaluation of 26 additional patients with atypical chest pain. A diagnosis could be made in all but 5 of them and radionuclide angiography was again the single most reliable test. Based on this study a new approach for the noninvasive evaluation of patients with suspected coronary artery disease is proposed.
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