PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Qualitative and quantitative assessment of adenosine triphosphate stress whole-heart dynamic myocardial perfusion imaging using 256-slice computed tomography.

  • Akira Kurata,
  • Naoto Kawaguchi,
  • Teruhito Kido,
  • Katsuji Inoue,
  • Jun Suzuki,
  • Akiyoshi Ogimoto,
  • Jun-ichi Funada,
  • Jitsuo Higaki,
  • Masao Miyagawa,
  • Mani Vembar,
  • Teruhito Mochizuki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0083950
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. e83950

Abstract

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BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to investigate the correlation of the qualitative transmural extent of hypoperfusion areas (HPA) using stress dynamic whole-heart computed tomography perfusion (CTP) imaging by 256-slice CT with CTP-derived myocardial blood flow (MBF) for the estimation of the severity of coronary artery stenosis. METHODS AND RESULTS: Eleven patients underwent adenosine triphosphate (0.16 mg/kg/min, 5 min) stress dynamic CTP by 256-slice CT (coverage: 8 cm, 0.27 s/rotation), and 9 of the 11 patients underwent coronary angiography (CAG). Stress dynamic CTP (whole-heart datasets over 30 consecutive heart beats in systole without spatial and temporal gaps) was acquired with prospective ECG gating (effective radiation dose: 10.4 mSv). The extent of HPAs was visually graded using a 3-point score (normal, subendocardial, transmural). MBF (ml/100g/min) was measured by deconvolution. Differences in MBF (mean ± standard error) according to HPA and CAG results were evaluated. In 27 regions (3 major coronary territories in 9 patients), 11 coronary stenoses (> 50% reduction in diameter) were observed. In 353 myocardial segments, HPA was significantly related to MBF (P 70%], 119 ± 69). CONCLUSION: The qualitative transmural extent of HPA using stress whole-heart dynamic CTP imaging by 256-slice CT exhibits a good correlation with quantitative CTP-derived MBF and may aid in assessing the hemodynamic significance of coronary artery disease.