Considerations about the influence of upper arms positioning on myocardial perfusion scintigraphy results / Considerações referentes à influência do posicionamento dos membros superiores sobre o resultado da cintilografia de perfusão do miocárdio

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2008

RESUMO

Contrary to the advances in imaging technology for nuclear cardiology applications, we keep using the same often uncomfortable and sometimes impracticable patient position- supine with arms raised above the head (C). We tested another position modality: supine with arms down at the sides of the trunk (T). The purpose of this study was to verify if the functional and perfusion results of the acquisition T are equivalent to those of the acquisition mode C. We studied 120 patients (pts), 83 (69%) male, aged 59.4±11.4 years and weighting 72.8±14 kg. We performed a one-day protocol (rest gated/stress), using 99mTc-sestamibi (370 MBq and 1110 MBq). In both times (rest and stress), we first performed acquisition in C and in sequence the acquisition in T. The studies were performed in three types of dual detector SPECT systems. T mode was executed successfully in all pts. Images were processed by the iterative reconstruction method (OSEM). Each study was independently interpreted by one nuclear medicine specialist from a group of seven physicians using the 17-segment model. The segments were scored using a 5-point model ranging from 0 (normal uptake) to 4 (uptake absent). The total score of the left ventricle at stress is referred to as the summed stress score (SSS) and at rest as the summed rest score (SRS). The patients were categorized in subgroups by two criteria: normal (SSS=0) or abnormal (SSS1) and low risk (SSS3) or risk (SSS>3). The values of the functional parameters of left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), end diastolic volume (EDV), end systolic volume (ESV), stress motion score (SMS) and stress thickening score (STS) for both C and T were automatically obtained by the quantitative gated SPECT (QGS) program and results were compared. Shoulder and/or back pain occurred in 23.3% of C patients and in 5% of T patients. There was no agreement between the 2040 segmental scores of both rest and stress in C and T modes (p<0.05). No significant differences between C and T were found for SSS and SRS in the 63 normal individuals nor in the 80 low risk patients. Good correlation between C and T was found for SSS (Rho=0.95, p=0.0001) and SRS (Rho=0.96 p=0.0001) in the 57 abnormal pts, but the mean SSS (9.28±8.10) and SRS (7.89±7.34) values of T were significantly lower (p<0.05) than the mean for SSS (10.07±7,71) and SRS(8.46±7,35) of C mode. Similar patterns were observed in the 40 risk pts; good correlation was found between C and T modes for SSS (Rho=0.95, p=0.0001) and SRS (Rho=0.96 p=0.0001), but the mean SSS (12.53±7.54) and SRS (10.60±7.08) values of T were significantly lower (p<0.05) than SSS (13.43±6.81) and SRS (11.33±6.97) of C mode. Good correlation between C and T was found for all functional parameters, except for EDV (p=0.0001). Although T mode appears to be more comfortable and presented a good correlation between SSS and SRS values, in abnormal and risk pts, the extent and severity of defects can be underestimated. Considering the important therapeutic and prognostic implications of an accurate perfusion measurement, the cardiac SPECT acquisition with the arms in down position should be avoided. When arms-down acquisition is the only alternative, scintigraphy results must be carefully interpreted, especially in abnormal scans whereas the amount of perfusion abnormalities can be underestimated.

ASSUNTO(S)

tomography emission-computed single-photon/utilization radionuclide imaging/methods cintilografia/métodos tomografia computadorizada de emissão do fóton único/métodos tomography emission-computed single-photon/methods tomografia computadorizada de emissão do fóton único/utilização cardiology/methods cardiologia/métodos

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