| Literature DB >> 32469191 |
Paulina Cegła1, Aleksandra Ciepłucha2, Marcin Pachowicz3, Beata Chrapko3, Tomasz Piotrowski4, Maciej Lesiak5.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases are the most common cause of death in patients over 60 years old. Pivotal imaging modalities in cardiac diagnostic workup are echocardiography, magnetic resonance, multi‑row detector computed tomography, coronary angiography, and radioisotope tests. In this study, we summarize the techniques of nuclear medicine (positron emission tomography, single‑photon emission computed tomography, radionuclide ventriculography) that could be implemented in the cardiovascular diagnostic algorithms. Despite being acknowledged in a few cardiology guidelines, these imaging methods are still underestimated by practitioners. Nevertheless, noninvasive diagnostic tools are of increasing potential and should be implemented whenever possible. We discuss the usefulness of particular techniques in the management of patients with obstructive and nonobstructive coronary artery disease, including assessment of myocardial perfusion, contractility, viability, and detection of unstable atherosclerotic plaques. Radioisotope imaging can also be valuable in the diagnostic workup of infective endocarditis, as well as cardiac sarcoidosis and amyloidosis. Apart from theoretical principles of nuclear cardiology, we also provide 3 case reports illustrating a practical implementation of these imaging modalities.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac metabolism; cardiac perfusion; nuclear cardiology; positron emission tomography; single‑ ‑photon emission computed tomography
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32469191 DOI: 10.33963/KP.15396
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kardiol Pol ISSN: 0022-9032 Impact factor: 3.108