Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia (Jan 2001)

Noninvasive diagnosis of allograft vascular disease after heart transplantation

  • Fernando Bacal,
  • Noedir Antonio Groppo Stolf,
  • Viviane Cordeiro Veiga,
  • William A. Chalela,
  • Cesar Grupi,
  • Ana Clara Rodrigues,
  • Eulógio E. Martinez,
  • Alfredo Inácio Fiorelli,
  • Luiz Felipe Pinho Moreira,
  • Edimar Alcides Bocchi,
  • Giovanni Bellotti,
  • José Antonio Franchini Ramires

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0066-782X2001000100004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 76, no. 1
pp. 36 – 42

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE: To determine the predictive values of noninvasive tests for the detection of allograft vascular disease. METHODS: We studied 39 patients with mean ages of 48±13 years and a follow-up period of 86±13 months. The diagnosis of allograft vascular disease was made by cine-coronary arteriography, and it was considered as positive if lesions existed that caused > or = 50% obstruction of the lumen. Patients underwent 24h Holter monitoring, thallium scintigraphy, a treadmill stress test, and dobutamine stress echocardiography. Sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values were determined in percentages for each method, as compared with the cine-coronary arteriography results. RESULTS: Allograft vascular disease was found in 15 (38%) patients. The Holter test showed 15.4% sensitivity, 95.5% specificity. For the treadmill stress test, sensitivity was 10%, specificity was 100%. When thallium scintigraphy was used, sensitivity was 40%, specificity 95.8%. On echocardiography with dobutamine, we found a 63.6% sensitivity, 91.3% specificity. When the dobutamine echocardiogram was associated with scintigraphy, sensitivity was 71.4%, specificity was 87%. CONCLUSION: In this group of patients, the combination of two noninvasive methods (dobutamine echocardiography and thallium scintigraphy) may be a good alternative for the detection of allograft vascular disease in asymptomatic patients with normal ventricular function.

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