Abstract

Platelet scintigraphy with radioactive indium-111 may be used both to identify and to reflect the activity of thrombin in vivo in man. Forty-one patients with acute myocardial infarction were studied for active left ventricular thrombosis by platelet scintigraphy and followed until in-hospital death, discharge, or same-admission cardiac surgery for evidence of systemic embolization. A total of 4.7 +/- 2.4 X 10(9) platelets (mean +/- 1 SD) labelled with 381 mu Ci +/- 51 mu Ci of indium-111 was injected intravenously at 91 +/- 88 hours following the onset of chest pain. Patients were imaged in multiple views on the day of and three to four days after injection of the platelet suspension. Group 1 (n = 29) had transmural myocardial infarctions, of which 21 were anterior (peak total level of creatine phosphokinase [CPK], 2,272 +/- 2,026 IU; mean +/- 1 SD) and eight were inferior (CPK level, 1,673 +/- 589 IU). Group 2 (n = 12) had subendocardial myocardial infarctions (CPK level 799 +/- 751 IU). Those with subendocardial and transmural inferior myocardial infarctions had neither left ventricular thrombosis nor emboli. Ten (48 percent) of 21 with anterior transmural myocardial infarctions had left ventricular thrombosis by platelet scintigraphy. Three with and one without such thrombosis by scintigraphy had acute neurologic episodes. In the group with anterior myocardial infarctions, seven of ten patients with and four of 11 without left ventricular thrombosis received heparin subcutaneously (chi 2 = 1.22 [Yates correction]; p greater than 0.30). We conclude that platelet scintigraphy may be used to monitor antiplatelet and anticoagulant therapy in patients with anterior transmural myocardial infarctions who are at risk for left ventricular thrombosis and systemic embolization.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call