Abstract

Thallium-dipyridamole imaging is a very sensitive test for predicting cardiac events after noncardiac surgery, but it lacks specificity. To improve specificity, a semiquantitative scoring system was developed that combined dipyridamole-induced reversible left ventricular dilatation with scintigraphic indexes for severity and extent of reversible perfusion defects. Using this scoring system, patients were classified into low, intermediate and high risk subgroups. Thallium-dipyridamole imaging was performed in 66 patients before major general and vascular surgery. Thirty-nine patients classified as low risk (30 with normal scans and 9 with fixed defects) underwent surgery uneventfully. Surgery was cancelled in 6 patients with extensive thallium redistribution and coronary angiography was performed because of severe coronary artery disease in 5 and idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy in 1. In the remaining 21 patients with thallium redistribution, a positive statistical correlation (p = 0.001) between scintigraphic indexes of severity and extent, and cardiac events was noted. Using cutoff values for the scintigraphic indexes, patients with reversible defects could be classified into intermediate and high risk subgroups. Only 1 of 11 patients at intermediate risk developed a complication, whereas 8 of 10 patients at high risk had a postoperative event (7 deaths and 1 myocardial infarction). Thus, using scintigraphic indexes for severity and extent, patients with reversible defects can be stratified into an intermediate risk subgroup that can safely undergo surgery and a high risk subgroup that requires coronary angiography.

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