An Introduction to Nuclear Cardiology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

An Introduction to Nuclear Cardiology

Description:

An Introduction to Nuclear Cardiology Anatomy & Physiology Four cardiac chambers left ventricle of importance in NM Coronary arteries supply myocardium with blood NM ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:785
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: keiserstud
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: An Introduction to Nuclear Cardiology


1
An IntroductiontoNuclear Cardiology
2
Anatomy Physiology
  • Four cardiac chambers
  • left ventricle of importance in NM
  • Coronary arteries
  • supply myocardium with blood
  • NM detects quality of perfusion to myocardium,
    an indirect assessment of the coronary arteries

3
CLINICAL INDICATIONS
  • Coronary artery disease causes myocardial
    ischemia and infarction.
  • Ischemia is reversible condition, caused by
    temporary deficiency of oxygen to the myocardium
  • Infarction is irreversible condition, that leads
    to death of a portion of the myocardium.

4
Clinical indications
  • During a stress test (exercise) or when certain
    drugs are administered, the demand for blood flow
    (oxygen) through the coronary arteries
    increases.\
  • If the increase in the demand cannot be met the
    myocardium becomes ischemic.
  • Ischemia can cause decreased tissue perfusion,
    and contraction in affected area.

5
Mechanical activity
  • Each cardiac cycle (each beat) consists of
    systole (ventricular contraction) and diastole
    (ventricular relaxation)
  • Both sides of heart contract in unison
  • Left ventricular contraction is most important to
    NM.

6
Radiopharmaceuticals
  • Evaluation of myocardial perfusion
  • Single photon emitters, thallium-201 chloride
    (201-Tl), Technitium 99m sestamibi, (tc99m
    tetrafosmin) (tc99m teboroxime)
  • Positron emitting tracer, Rubidium-82 (Rb82)

7
Radiopharmaceuticals
  • Evaluation of ventricular function
  • Tc99m labeled red blood cells
  • Tc99m albumin
  • Detection of acute myocardial necrosis
  • Tc99m pyrophospate (PYP)
  • Indium 111 antimyosin

8
Types of Procedures
  • Gated cardiac blood pool
  • typically a rest study
  • MUGA or NVG are common names
  • First pass cardiac
  • stress or rest
  • Myocardial perfusion
  • SPECT images
  • stress/rest or rest only
  • frequently gated

9
Gated Blood Pool
  • Gating process
  • Functional assessment
  • ventricular wall motion
  • ES and ED ventricular volumes
  • LV ejection fraction
  • normal 64 /- 12

10
Gated Blood Pool
  • Radiopharmaceutical
  • Tc-99m labeled red blood cells
  • in-vitro and in-vivo labeling
  • Images
  • anterior
  • left lateral
  • left anterior oblique (best LV separation)

11
Gated Blood Pool
  • Exercise assessment
  • stress done with bicycle
  • rest EF to compare stress EF
  • Primary uses of test
  • congestive heart failure
  • cardiomyopathy
  • chemo cardiotoxicity

12
First Pass Cardiac Study
  • Whats first pass?
  • temporal separation of chambers
  • Functional assessment
  • ventricular wall motion
  • ES and ED ventricular volumes
  • LV and RV ejection fractions
  • pulmonary transit time

13
First Pass Cardiac Study
  • Radiopharmaceuticals via bolus
  • Tc-99m DTPA
  • Tc-99m sestamibi
  • Images
  • one anterior image for 60 seconds
  • acquisition is divided into many millisecond
    frames for temporal resolution

14
First Pass Cardiac Study
  • Can be performed with exercise
  • stress done with bicycle
  • rest EF to compare to stress EF
  • Primary uses of test
  • same as gated cardiac study
  • better than gated at right ventricle assessment
    and cardiac shunts

15
First Pass Cardiac Study
  • Primary limitation This procedure requires a
    special nuclear imaging camera that cannot be
    used to perform any other type of nuclear
    procedures. Many clinics cannot justify the
    cost, so a gated study is used instead.

16
Myocardial Perfusion Study
  • Assess coronary blood flow
  • Demonstrate blood perfusing the LV myocardium
  • Software allows gating for EF
  • 3D reconstruction of heart

17
Myocardial Perfusion
  • Radiopharmaceuticals
  • Thallium-201 chloride
  • Tc-99m sestamibi
  • SPECT acquisition
  • provides cross-sectional images of the myocardium
    in the short axis, horizontal long axis and
    vertical long axis planes

18
Myocardial Perfusion
  • Performed at rest stress
  • Stress study options
  • treadmill exercise
  • pharmacologic stress agents
  • adenosine
  • persantine (dipyridamole)
  • dobutamine

19
Myocardial Perfusion
  • Percentage of LV myocardium receiving decreased
    perfusion
  • Differentiate ischemia from MI
  • 24 hour delayed images demonstrate myocardial
    viability (hibernating)
  • Rest-only studies can provide information on
    acute MIs

20
Patient Prep
  • Any stress procedure
  • NPO midnight
  • off beta-blocker medications
  • Chemical stress procedure
  • off caffeine and asthma medications for
    adenosine/persantine chemical stress
  • Any rest procedure
  • requires no patient prep

21
Acquisition
  • Inject first dose and acquire resting SPECT study
  • Prepare patient for stress
  • At maximal stress inject radio-pharmaceutical
  • Acquire stress SPECT study (gated)
  • variations in procedure sequence may occur

22
Exam Results
  • Myocardial Infarction
  • perfusion defect on rest stress
  • Myocardial Ischemia
  • perfusion defect on stress only

23
Time Comparison
  • Gated study
  • rest 40 minutes
  • First pass study
  • rest 15 minutes
  • stress 60 minutes
  • Myocardial perfusion study
  • 60 minutes stress 30 minutes rest
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com