Abstract
To the Editor: I read with interest the recent paper published by De Lima et al.1 A recent meta-analysis by Rabbat et al2 casts doubt on one conclusion of De Lima et al, as Rabbat et al found that noninvasive stress imaging was predictive of acute myocardial infarction and cardiac death in renal transplant candidates. De Lima et al’s findings regarding the accuracy of dipyridamole single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) thallium for prediction of coronary anatomy are generally concordant with previous publications (with the notable exception of Dahan et al,3 who employed a novel stress protocol utilizing combined dipyridamole and exercise thallium imaging in hemodialysis patients). The findings of De Lima et al regarding dobutamine stress echocardiography are difficult to accept in the context of conventional clinical practice. Specifically, the authors in the present study did not administer atropine to augment the heart rate response during the administration of dobutamine. It would be helpful for …
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