Literature DB >> 10876209

Dipyridamole-thallium/sestamibi before vascular surgery: a prospective blinded study in moderate-risk patients.

C de Virgilio1, K Toosie, M Elbassir, C Donayre, J D Baker, K Narahara, F Mishkin, R J Lewis, C Chang, R White, F V Mody.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study assessed in a prospective, blinded fashion whether a reversible defect on dipyridamole-thallium (DTHAL)/sestamibi (DMIBI) can predict adverse cardiac events after elective vascular surgery in patients with one or more clinical risk factors.
METHODS: Consecutive patients with one or more clinical risk factors underwent a preoperative blinded DTHAL/DMIBI. Patients with recent congestive heart failure (CHF) or myocardial infarction (MI) or severe or unstable angina were excluded.
RESULTS: Eighty patients (78% men; mean age, 65 years) completed the study. Diabetes mellitus was the most frequent clinical risk factor (73%), followed by age older than 70 years (41%), angina (29%), Q wave on electrocardiogram (26%), history of CHF (7%), and ventricular ectopy (3%). The results of DTHAL/DMIBI were normal in 36 patients (45%); a reversible plus or minus fixed defect was demonstrated in 28 patients (36%), and a fixed defect alone was demonstrated in 15 patients (19%). Nine adverse cardiac events (11%) occurred, including three cases of CHF, and one case each of unstable angina, Q wave MI, non-Q wave MI, and cardiac arrest (successfully resuscitated). Two cardiac deaths occurred (2% overall mortality), one after a Q wave MI and one after CHF and a non-Q wave MI. The cardiac event rate was 14% for reversible defect and 9.8% without reversible defect (P =.71). The cardiac event rate was 12.5% (one of eight cases) for two or more reversible defects, versus 11.1% (eight of 72 cases) for fewer than two reversible defects (P = 1.0). The sensitivity rate of two or more areas of redistribution was 11% (95% CI, 0.3%-48%), the specificity rate was 90%, and the positive and negative predictive values were 12.5% and 89%, respectively.
CONCLUSION: Our study demonstrated no association between reversible defects on DTHAL/DMIBI and adverse cardiac events in moderate-risk patients undergoing elective vascular surgery.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10876209     DOI: 10.1067/mva.2000.107311

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vasc Surg        ISSN: 0741-5214            Impact factor:   4.268


  3 in total

1.  A meta-analysis comparing the prognostic accuracy of six diagnostic tests for predicting perioperative cardiac risk in patients undergoing major vascular surgery.

Authors:  M D Kertai; E Boersma; J J Bax; M H Heijenbrok-Kal; M G M Hunink; G J L'talien; J R T C Roelandt; H van Urk; D Poldermans
Journal:  Heart       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 5.994

2.  Preoperative Cardiac Stress Testing in the Southern California Vascular Outcomes Improvement Collaborative.

Authors:  Kaelan Chan; Ahmed M Abou-Zamzam; Karen Woo
Journal:  Ann Vasc Surg       Date:  2017-11-29       Impact factor: 1.466

3.  The coronary CT angiography vision protocol: a prospective observational imaging cohort study in patients undergoing non-cardiac surgery.

Authors:  Tej Sheth; Craig Butler; Benjamin Chow; M T V Chan; Ayesha Mitha; Peter Nagele; Vikas Tandon; Lori Stewart; Michelle Graham; G Y S Choi; T Kisten; P K Woodard; Andrew Crean; Y F Abdul Aziz; G Karthikeyan; C K Chow; W Szczeklik; M Markobrada; T Mastracci; P J Devereaux
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2012-07-31       Impact factor: 2.692

  3 in total

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