Abstract

Myocardial scans obtained by injecting radioactive 201thallium during exercise were correlated with electrocardiograms obtained at rest and during exercise, with coronary arteriographic abnormalities, and with left ventriculograms in 55 patients suspected of having coronary arterial disease. Thirty-nine patients had significant coronary arterial disease, 34 of whom had abnormal myocardial scans after exercise and 21 of whom had abnormal ECGs during exercise. The myocardial scan after exercise was most frequently abnormal in the presence of significant abnormalities in the Q wave or localized left ventricular asynergy and when ST-segment depression persisted for longer than ten minutes after exercise. All patients with single-vessel disease had abnormal myocardial scans after exercise, whereas five of 29 patients with two or more abnormal vessels had normal scans. Patients with coronary arterial disease were more likely to have a normal myocardial scan after exercise when the resting ECG and left ventriculogram were normal and when exercise-induced ST-segment depression persisted for less than ten minutes. The combination of the myocardial scan after exercise and the ECG during maximal exercise had a sensitivity of 98 percent. The myocardial scan after exercise alone had a specificity of 100 percent. These observations indicate that the myocardial scan obtained by injecting 201thallium during exercise is an important diagnostic adjunct in the identification of patients with coronary arterial disease.

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