Abstract

BackgroundWe previously reported the clinical feasibility and positive impact on image characteristics of a data-driven cardiac respiratory motion (RM) correction method (REGAT) applicable to CZT SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI). Here, we evaluate its impact on the extent and severity of myocardial perfusion defects (MPD). MethodsWe included 25 patients having a 1-day 99mTc-Tetrofosmin stress/rest MPI acquired with multi-pinhole CZT SPECT. Acquisitions were processed with REGAT to generate mean RM gated SPECT. These were summed either after (R-SPECT) or without realignment (NR-SPECT). We noted the maximal cardiac RM shift in the 3 axes of the left ventricle (LV). Both visual and semi-quantitative analyses of myocardial tracer uptake were realized. Studies were classified as having an impact on the extent/severity of MPD with REGAT if ≥1 segment presented a severity score changing by ≥1 level between NR-SPECT and R-SPECT. An impact on the extent of MPD was considered present if at least 1 segment shifted from normal (score = 0) to abnormal (score different from 0) or inversely. ResultsCardiac RM was >10 mm in 55% of studies. With visual and semi-quantitative analyses, an impact on the extent/severity MPD was observed in 14% of all studies (7/49) and 60% of studies with cardiac RM >15 mm. An impact on the extent of MPD was observed in 5 of the 7 upper listed studies. All studies presenting an impact on MPD had RM in the anterior to inferior LV axis >10 mm. ConclusionsA substantial number of MPI studies presented significant cardiac RM. Cardiac RM compensation showed a frequent impact on the extent/severity of MPD.

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