Abstract

Following coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), testing for myocardial ischemia by noninvasive imaging is often hampered by false-positive results. The aim of this study was to find test parameters with the best potential to identify myocardial ischemia in post-CABG patients. Fifty-two consecutive patients scheduled for CABG, underwent both dobutamine stress echocardiography (DSE) and cardiac magnetic resonance first-pass perfusion imaging (CMR-FPPI) with adenosine vasodilation, before and 8-10months after the surgical revascularization. A pathologic biphasic stress response (PBR) expresses the presence of contractile reserve during low-dose dobutamine that decreases to hypo- or akinesia provoked by high-dose dobutamine. During DSE, potential PBR, segmental wall-motion score (WMS) as well as peak-systolic longitudinal strain (PLS) at peak-dose dobutamine were assessed. Post-CABG, there was still a relatively high prevalence of ischemia-positive segments evaluated by deformation imaging, but the number of such segments was significantly lower by PBR (20% and 22%) compared with peak-dose strain and WMS (62% and 77%, respectively; P<.05). The use of PBR instead of peak-dose WMS and strain could reduce the number of false-positive test results post-CABG. Among all imaging modalities tested, PBR by WMS and strain may be useful parameters for identifying patients with the need for new revascularization. We furthermore found that DSE may be interpreted as positive when revealing at least three ischemia-positive segments. The sensitivity of these test modalities for detecting coronary restenosis needs to be determined in further studies on a cohort of symptomatic post-CABG patients.

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