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Title: [Planar myocardial scintigraphy with technetium-99m-sestamibi in acute myocardial infarct treated with thrombolytic therapy]. Author: Zammarchi A, Pitscheider W, Mautone A, Oberhollenzer R, Lintner W, Erlicher A, Crepaz R, Osele L, Braito E. Journal: G Ital Cardiol; 1995 Aug; 25(8):1011-9. PubMed ID: 7498619. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Nuclear cardiology permits the estimation of the myocardial infarction size and the result of the thrombolytic therapy. The aim of the study was to demonstrate the feasibility of the planar myocardial scintigraphy with Technetium-99-m-sestamibi in the coronary intensive care unit for the early identification of the infarct size and the result of the thrombolytic therapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We considered 10 patients affected by a first myocardial infarction (5 anterior and 5 inferior wall) then treated with thrombolytic therapy (APSAC 30 U. iv) within an interval of 3 hours from the onset of the symptoms. Technetium-99-m-sestamibi was injected before the thrombolytic therapy and the planar imaging was registered after 2-3 hours with a mobile gamma-camera. After 24 hours and before patient discharge we repeated the scintigraphic evaluation. Within 24 hours from the thrombolytic therapy the coronary angiography was performed for the demonstration of patency of the infarct-related artery. The left ventricle myocardial perfusion was divided in the 3 planar projections into 13 segments. The perfusion in each segment was evaluated with a perfusion score: 0 = normal perfusion, 1 = moderately reduced, 2 = severely reduced, 3 = absent. The sum of the hypoperfused segments represented the infarct size. A perfusion score improvement greater than 40% was considered a marker of reperfusion. RESULTS: The infarct size involved 4.4 +/- 1.4 segments in the anterior and 2 +/- 0.6 segments in the inferior wall infarctions (p < 0.05). The scintigraphic imaging made 24 hours after the myocardial infarction allowed the diagnosis of coronary reperfusion in 7 patients. The coronary angiography demonstrated the infarct related artery patency in 9 patients (all with TIMI perfusion score = 3). The nuclear imaging at patient discharge provided the diagnosis or reperfusion in 8 cases and demonstrated an improvement of the myocardial perfusion score in 5 cases. CONCLUSION: The scintigraphic imaging with Technetium-99-m-sestamibi in the patients with a myocardial infarction treated with thrombolytic therapy is feasible with a mobile gamma-camera in the intensive coronary care unit. The quality of planar imaging is good and allows the evaluation of myocardial infarct size and efficiency of thrombolytic therapy. An earlier scintigraphic imaging should be taken into consideration for a more timely non-invasive evaluation of patients who need coronary angiography and, if necessary, a rescue PTCA.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]