| Literature DB >> 2230989 |
E V Garcia1, E G DePuey, R E Sonnemaker, H R Neely, E E DePasquale, W L Robbins, W H Moore, J Heo, A S Iskandrian, J Campbell.
Abstract
A multicenter trial was performed on 140 patients from four centers to determine the accuracy of quantitative analysis of stress/delayed thallium-201 myocardial tomograms using normal limits to assess the relative amount of reversibility of stress-induced defects. The patients were found to have 85 fixed and 124 reversible defects, as determined by visual interpretation. Reversibility bull's-eye polar maps were compared to gender-matched normal limits from 36 normals. Regions were identified as reversible if their normalized difference between stress and 4 hr greater than 1.5 s.d.s. from the mean normal limits. Overall agreement between experts at multicenter sites and reversibility maps was 73% for reversible defects and 80% of fixed defects. Sensitivity in detecting reversibility was highest for the left circumflex (88%) and lowest for the right coronary (60%). These results indicate that reversibility polar maps and normal limits offer an objective, accurate technique for determining the reversibility of stress-induced perfusion defects.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2230989
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nucl Med ISSN: 0161-5505 Impact factor: 10.057