* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Matching the Clinical Question to the Appropriate Imaging
Cardiovascular disease wikipedia , lookup
Saturated fat and cardiovascular disease wikipedia , lookup
Remote ischemic conditioning wikipedia , lookup
Cardiac contractility modulation wikipedia , lookup
Cardiac surgery wikipedia , lookup
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia wikipedia , lookup
Electrocardiography wikipedia , lookup
History of invasive and interventional cardiology wikipedia , lookup
Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup
Matching the Clinical Question to the Appropriate Imaging Procedure: What a cardiologist wants from cardiac imaging Samuel Wann MD, MACC ACCF/ACR/SCCT/ACMR/ASNC/NASCI/SIR Appropriateness Criteria Class A - APPROPRIATE INDICATIONS continued • Detection of CAD, symptomatic – Intermediate pre-test probability, ecg uninterpretable, unable to exercise – Suspected coronary anomalies – Acute chest pain, intermediate probability CAD, ecg/enzymes normal – Uninterpretable or equivocal stress test (ex, echo, or nuclear) ACCF/ACR/SCCT/ACMR/ASNC/NASCI/SIR Appropriateness Criteria Class A APPROPRIATE INDICATIONS continued • • • • • • • • • Complex congenital heart disease Coronary evaluation in new onset CHF Cardiac mass with tech limited echo/MR Pericardial evaluation with limited echo/MR Pulmonary venous anatomy pre-ablation Coronary venous anatomy pre-biV pacer Coronary & graft evaluation pre-redo surgery Aortic aneurysm/dissection Pulmonary embolism ACCF/ACR/SCCT/ACMR/ASNC/NASCI/SIR Appropriateness Criteria Class U - UNCERTAIN CTA INDICATIONS Continued Detection of symptomatic CAD • Intermediate pre-test probability, ECG interpretable, can exercise • Low pre-test probability, normal ecg, enzymes • “Triple rule-out” normal ecg, enzymes Detection of asymptomatic CAD • calcium scoring in moderate or high risk patients ACCF/ACR/SCCT/ACMR/ASNC/NASCI/SIR Appropriateness Criteria Class U - UNCERTAIN CTA INDICATIONS Continued • Pre-op evaluation for non-cardiac surgery in intermediate or high risk patients • Chest pain post CABG or stent • Evaluation of LV function post MI or CHF with technically limited echocardiogram • Evaluation of prosthetic valve with technically limited echo or MR ACCF/ACR/SCCT/ACMR/ASNC/NASCI/SIR Appropriateness Criteria Class I - INAPPROPRIATE CTA INDICATIONS continued • Symptomatic CAD with high pre-test probability, ST elevation or positive enzymes • Asymptomatic low or moderate risk • Moderate to severe ischemia on stress • Hi CHD risk with negative angio within 2 yrs • Coronary calcium score >400 ACCF/ACR/SCCT/ACMR/ASNC/NASCI/SIR Appropriateness Criteria Class I - INAPPROPRIATE CTA INDICATIONS continued • Preop eval low risk surgery intermediate risk • Bypass grafts <5yrs post CABG • Detection of in stent restonsis or coronary anatomy post PCI • Evaluation of LV function post MI or CHF • Repeat calcium score <5 years Non-invasive CV Imaging 2006 • ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY – Hand carried ultrasound – Techniques to demonstrate LV dyssynchrony • NUCLEAR CARDIOLOGY – Molecular imaging, new tracers – PET/CT & SPECT/CT • CARDIAC MAGNETIC RESONANCE – Demonstration of ischemia and infarction • CT ANGIOGRAPHY – The next one-stop-shop Echocardiography 2006 • Hand-carried ultrasound • Evaluation of patients for cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) Echo Guided Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy • Patients with severe CHF & wide QRS • Pace late activated LV segment to coordinate LV contraction • Improve ejection fraction & functional capacity • Reduce mitral regurgitation • Reverse ventricular remodeling Echo Guided Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy • 1/3 of patients fail to respond • Unknown number of CHF patients with narrow QRS may respond • Degree of dyssynchrony not related to QRS width • CRT expensive, invasive; CHF very common – need to identify patients who will benefit most Echo Methods for Detecting Dyssynchrony • Septal to Posterior Wall Motion Delay – M-mode Echo • Tissue Doppler Imaging - time to peak systolic velocity • Real Time 3D Echo – regional time to minimum systolic volume • Speckle tracking for Radial Strain – active versus passive motion Tissue Doppler Echo Synchronous wall motion Dysynchrony LV uniformly green LV red lateral wall. 4D Echo Regional Volume Analysis Velocity Vector Imaging NORMAL RADIAL DYSSYNCHRONY Strain Rate Imaging Echo in CRT • • • • • • No agreement on which method best Technically challenging, non-intuitive No agreement on “normal” values Only short term follow-up, soft end points No controlled randomized trials Few patients with narrow QRS may respond to CRT Nuclear Cardiology 2006 • Molecular imaging • PET/CT & SPECT/CT Problems with SPECT • • • • • • • Attenuation artifacts Abdominal uptake Small hearts, women Multi-vessel disease Intermediate stenoses Microvascular disease Complex, time consuming protocols Prognostic power of myocardial perfusion imaging Cardiac death 5 MI Event Rate, %/Year 4.2* 4 3 2.7** 2.9 2.9* 2.3 2 1 0 0.5 0.8 0.3 n=2946 n=884 n=455 n=898 Normal Mildly Abnormal Moderately Abnormal Severely Abnormal Scan Result Hachamovitch R, et al. Circulation. 1998;97:535-543. “Prognostic value” word search Nuclear cardiology Coronary CTA Pubmed – 12,005 entries Pubmed – 0 entries Google - 29,500 entries Google – 5 entries Fused PET/CTA Namdar et al. J Nucl Med 2005; 46:930–935 Circumflex Stenosis CTA Namdar et al. J Nucl Med 2005; 46:930–935 Cath Fused PET/CTA ADENOSINE INDUCED HYPEREMIA Cardiovascular MR 2006 • Structure and function • Stress wall motion analysis • Delayed contrast ehancement of infarcted myocardium • Myocardial perfusion Dobutamine Stress MRI Black blood images of the heart showing bright signals in the right ventricular (RV) free wall (arrow) consistent with fatty deposits suggestive of arrhythmogenic RV dysplasia Lima, J. A.C. et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2004;44:1164-1171 Copyright ©2004 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Restrictions may apply. Completed LAD distribution MI: 3 weeks prior Anterior MI with Apical Thrombus Intra-arterial coronary angiography –a tarnished “gold standard” • 1 million diagnostic cath/year US (20-40% insignificant disease) • 1.5% morbidity, 0.2% mortality • High inter- and intra-observer variability • Poor correlation with post-mortem anatomy • Physiologic relevance of stenosis not directly demonstated Cardiac MR • Superb Structure & Function – volumes, mass, regurgitation, gross anatomy • Perfusion, infarction • No radiation • Time consuming, multiple acquisitions, intense operator interaction • Limited availability – limited to highly specialized units. • Limited application to coronary anatomy “But there is a disorder of the breast marked with strong and peculiar symptoms…. The seat of it, and sense of strangling, and anxiety with which it is attended, may make it not improperly be called angina pectoris. They who are afflicted with it, are seized while they are walking, with a painful and most disagreeable sensation in the breast, which seems as if it would extinguish life, if it were to increase or continue...” Heberden W. Med Trans. 1772. Netter illustrations used with permission of Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Opportunities for Imaging CT DETECTION OF CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE THE FOR CT ANGIOGRAPHY CT CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY CIRCUMFLEX STENOSIS How accurate is 64 slice CT? N Rotation Sens. Spec. NPV Unevaluable Leschka 53 370 ms 94% 97% 99% Raff 70 330 ms 86% 95% 98% Leber 59 330 ms 73% 97% 99% Mollet 52 330 ms 99% 95% 99% 2% Ropers 82 330 ms 95% 93% 99% 4% segments > 1.5 Fine 330 ms 95% 96% 95% 6% arteries > 1.5 66 12% Assessment of Intracoronary Stent Coronary CTA for Evaluation of Left Main Stent Patency 100 100 100 91 N = 70 80 67 60 % 40 20 0 Sensitivity Specificity Negative Predictive Value Positive Predictive Value Van Mieghen CAG et al. Circulation 2006;114:645-653 NON-CALCIFIED “SOFT” PLAQUE Echo LV Dyssynchrony • No gold standard • Multiple echo methods and measurements, no widely accepted “normal” values • Short-term, “soft” end points assessed for efficacy of echo/CRT • No randomized controls • Few patients with narrow QRS respond to CRT First-pass, adenosine-augmented multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) myocardial perfusion imaging in a patient referred for invasive angiography after single-photon emission computed tomography showed a fixed perfusion deficit in the inferior and inferolateral territories George, R. T. et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:153-160 Copyright ©2006 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Restrictions may apply. In this pig with subendocardial infarction, the transmural differentiation of viable and nonviable myocardium is demonstrated with DE-MSCT in short-axis view (B) and long-axis view (C) with TTC pathology as standard of reference (A) Baks, T. et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:144-152 Copyright ©2006 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Restrictions may apply. DE-MSCT provides higher spatial resolution than DE-MRI Baks, T. et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:144-152 Copyright ©2006 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Restrictions may apply. First-pass short-axis image of the heart obtained after injection of contrast agent revealing a hypoenhanced area in the lateral wall (arrow) consistent with myocardial ischemia Lima, J. A.C. et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2004;44:1164-1171 LA thrombus 3D PV Measurement & Pre-Ablation Mapping 3D PV Measurement & Pre-Ablation Mapping Challenges for Cardiac CTA • Reduce radiation dose • Improve temporal and spatial resolution • Perfusion and infarction • Plaque morphology WISCONSIN HEART HOSPITAL Pretest likelihood CT 0% 50% 100% MPI Fractional flow reserve in 77 yo with intermediate LAD lesion From: Kern: Circulation, Volume 114(12).September 19, 2006.1321-1341