Abstract

To examine the relationship between the improvement of wall motion in infarcted regions after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) and thallium-201 uptake in the delayed image of exercise thallium-201 scintigraphy before PTCA, 14 patients with anterior old myocardial infarction were studied. Exercise thallium-201 scintigraphy was performed before PTCA of left anterior descending artery, and mean percent thallium-201 uptake of abnormal segments was calculated in the initial and 4-hour delayed images. Left ventricular angiography was performed during catheterization, before, and 4 to 13 months after PTCA; and regional ejection fraction of anterior wall was calculated. Atrial pacing stress test with the measurement of lactate concentration of aorta and great cardiac vein was performed during catheterization before PTCA. In five patients with mean percent thallium-201 uptake in the delayed image ≤50% (group I), regional ejection fraction did not increase after PTCA (23% ± 9% to 24% ± 12%). In the other nine patients with mean percent thallium-201 uptake >50% (group II), regional ejection fraction increased significantly after PTCA (39% ± 18% to 47% ± 14%; p < 0.05). There was no significant difference in regional ejection fraction, lactate extraction ratio during maximal pacing, and the redistribution of exercise thallium-201 scintigraphy between the two groups before PTCA. Thus the delayed image before PTCA is useful to detect reversible nonfunctioning viable myocardium (hibernating myocardium) in the infarcted region. However, the wall-motion abnormality and the degree of stress-induced ischemia in the infarcted region before PTCA may not be necessarily useful for the detection of hibernating myocardium.

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