Erschienen in:
23.07.2020 | Original Article
Early onset of left ventricular regional asynchrony in arteries with sub-clinical stenosis
verfasst von:
Andrew Van Tosh, MD, John R. Votaw, PhD, C. David Cooke, MSEE, J. Jane Cao, MD, MPH, Christopher J. Palestro, MD, Kenneth J. Nichols, PhD
Erschienen in:
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology
|
Ausgabe 3/2021
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Abstract
Background
Asynchrony has been reported to be a marker of ischemic-induced left ventricular dysfunction, the magnitude of which correlates with extent of epicardial coronary disease. We wished to determine whether normal-appearing arterial territories with mild degrees of asynchrony have lower 82Rb PET absolute myocardial blood flow (MBF) and/or lower myocardial flow reserve (MFR).
Methods and Results
Data were examined retrospectively for 105 patients evaluated for known/suspected CAD who underwent rest/regadenoson-stress 82Rb PET/CT and quantitative coronary angiography. Rest and stress absolute MBF and MFR were quantified from first-pass 82Rb PET curves. Regional relative myocardial perfusion summed stress score (SSS), summed rest score (SRS), regional phase bandwidth (BW), and regional semi-quantitative asynchrony visual scores of (Asynch) were assessed. We found that in apparently normal arteries (SSS < 4, SRS < 4 and stenosis < 70%), those with abnormally low MFR < 2.0 compared to those with MFR ≥ 2.0 had larger phase BW (186 ± 79° vs 158 ± 67°, P = .02), and more visually apparent Asynch (5.7 ± 4.2 vs 3.9 ± 3.6, P = .02), which was associated with increasing stenosis values (ρ = 0.44, P < .0001).
Conclusion
A subgroup of coronary territories with normal relative perfusion and normal or non-obstructive coronary disease may have reduced MFR, which is signaled physiologically by a mild degree of left ventricular asynchrony.