Literature DB >> 21153708

Value of additional myocardial perfusion imaging during dobutamine stress magnetic resonance for the assessment of intermediate coronary artery disease.

Rolf Gebker1, M Frick, C Jahnke, A Berger, C Schneeweis, R Manka, S Kelle, C Klein, B Schnackenburg, E Fleck, I Paetsch.   

Abstract

This study was performed to assess the role of additional myocardial perfusion imaging during high dose dobutamine/atropine stress magnetic resonance (DSMR-wall motion) for the evaluation of patients with intermediate (50-70%) coronary artery stenosis. Routine DSMR-wall motion was combined with perfusion imaging (DSMR-perfusion) in 174 consecutive patients with chest pain syndromes who were scheduled for a clinically indicated coronary angiography. When defining CAD as the presence of a ≥ 50% stenosis, the addition of perfusion imaging improved sensitivity (90 vs. 79%, P < 0.001) with a non-significant reduction in specificity (85 vs. 90%, P = 0.13) and an improvement in overall diagnostic accuracy (88 vs. 84%, P = 0.008). Adding perfusion imaging improved sensitivity in patients with intermediate stenosis (87 vs. 72%, P = 0.03), but not in patients with severe (≥70%) stenosis (93 vs. 84%, P = 0.06). In patients with severe stenosis specificity of DSMR-perfusion versus DSMR-wall motion decreased (61 vs 70%, P = 0.001) resulting in a lower overall accuracy (71 vs 74%, P = 0.03). Using a cutoff of ≥50% for the definition of CAD, sensitivity of DSMR-perfusion compared to DSMR-wall motion was significantly higher in patients with single vessel (88 vs. 77%, P = 0.03) and multi vessel disease (93 vs. 79%, P = 0.03), whereas no significant differences were found using a cutoff of ≥70% stenosis for the definition of CAD. The addition of perfusion imaging during DSMR-wall motion improved the sensitivity in patients with intermediate coronary artery stenosis. Overall diagnostic accuracy increased only when defining CAD as ≥50% stenosis. In patients with ≥70% stenosis DSMR-wall motion alone had higher accuracy due to more false-positive cases with DSMR-perfusion.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21153708     DOI: 10.1007/s10554-010-9764-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging        ISSN: 1569-5794            Impact factor:   2.357


  26 in total

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Journal:  Circulation       Date:  1999-10-19       Impact factor: 29.690

4.  Head-to-head comparison of first-pass MR perfusion imaging during adenosine and high-dose dobutamine/atropine stress.

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Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 2.357

5.  Comparative accuracy of real-time myocardial contrast perfusion imaging and wall motion analysis during dobutamine stress echocardiography for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease.

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7.  Noninvasive diagnosis of ischemia-induced wall motion abnormalities with the use of high-dose dobutamine stress MRI: comparison with dobutamine stress echocardiography.

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9.  Validation of magnetic resonance myocardial perfusion imaging with fractional flow reserve for the detection of significant coronary heart disease.

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10.  Additional value of myocardial perfusion imaging during dobutamine stress magnetic resonance for the assessment of coronary artery disease.

Authors:  Rolf Gebker; Cosima Jahnke; Robert Manka; Ashraf Hamdan; Bernhard Schnackenburg; Eckart Fleck; Ingo Paetsch
Journal:  Circ Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2008-07-30       Impact factor: 7.792

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Review 6.  Assessment of stable coronary artery disease by cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging: Current and emerging techniques.

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