Literature DB >> 1884505

Exercise radionuclide angiocardiography predicts cardiac death in patients with coronary artery disease.

R H Jones1, S H Johnson, C Bigelow, K S Pieper, R E Coleman, F R Cobb, D B Pryor, K L Lee.   

Abstract

The purpose of this investigation was to document the relative importance of three clinical and three radionuclide variables for prediction of cardiac death in a consecutive group of patients evaluated for coronary artery disease. During a 6 1/2-year period, beginning in January 1978, 2,042 consecutive patients underwent radionuclide angiocardiography, with a clinical diagnosis of coronary artery disease, at Duke University Medical Center. A subgroup of 318 patients who underwent surgical myocardial revascularization near the time of initial study were excluded from later analysis. Clinical follow-up information was complete in a group of 1,663 patients who did not undergo interventional therapy. The 141 cardiac deaths in these 1,663 patients were the study end point. Cox proportional hazards models analyzed the prognostic information contained in three clinical variables (pain type, age, and sex) and three radionuclide angiocardiogram variables (exercise ejection fraction, resting end-diastolic volume, and change in heart rate with exercise). One-variable models confirmed the prognostic importance of each of these six variables. A multivariable model in which all six variables were used showed clinical variables to contain only 5% and the radionuclide variables 95% of the prognostic information. The exercise ejection fraction was the single most important variable, which alone contained 85% of the total information in the model. Curves relating probability of no cardiac death to the exercise ejection fraction identified a value of 0.50 as an inflection point. Patients with exercise ejection fractions below 0.50 demonstrate a probability of cardiac death that increases as the ejection fraction decreases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1884505

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  9 in total

Review 1.  Measurement of ventricular function with radionuclide techniques.

Authors:  Kim A Williams
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rep       Date:  2003-01       Impact factor: 2.931

2.  Role of regional myocardial dysfunction by gated myocardial perfusion SPECT in the prognostic evaluation of patients with coronary artery disease.

Authors:  Tali Sharir
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2005 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 5.952

3.  Multicenter intercomparison assessment of consistency of left ventricular function from a gated cardiac SPECT phantom.

Authors:  Hein J Verberne; Petra Dibbets-Schneider; Astrid Spijkerboer; Marcel Stokkel; Berthe L F van Eck-Smit; Ellinor Busemann Sokole
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2006-11       Impact factor: 5.952

4.  Gated myocardial perfusion imaging for the assessment of left ventricular function and volume: from SPECT to PET.

Authors:  Tali Sharir
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2007 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 5.952

5.  The role of first-pass radionuclide angiography in the era of gated SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging.

Authors:  Rajesh Venkataraman; Jack Heo; Robert C Hendel; John J Mahmarian; Ami E Iskandrian
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2008-09-07       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 6.  Does myocardial perfusion imaging provide incremental prognostic information to left ventricular ejection fraction?

Authors:  Daniel W Mudrick; Eric Velazquez; Salvador Borges-Neto
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rep       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 2.931

7.  Independent and incremental prognostic value of left ventricular ejection fraction determined by stress gated rubidium 82 PET imaging in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease.

Authors:  Kirkeith Lertsburapa; Alan W Ahlberg; Timothy M Bateman; Deborah Katten; Lyndy Volker; S James Cullom; Gary V Heller
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2008-09-12       Impact factor: 5.952

8.  Stress-related variations in left ventricular function as assessed with gated myocardial perfusion SPECT.

Authors:  Hein J Verberne; Marcel G W Dijkgraaf; G Aernout Somsen; Berthe L F van Eck-Smit
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2003 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 9.  Single photon emission computed tomography: an alternative imaging modality in left ventricular evaluation.

Authors:  Hulya Yalçin; Sofiane Maza; Fatih Yalçin
Journal:  Vasc Health Risk Manag       Date:  2008
  9 in total

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