Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) has shown benefits in patients with severe heart failure. However, at least 30% of patients selected for CRT by use of traditional criteria (New York Heart Association class III or IV, depressed left ventricular [LV] ejection fraction, and prolonged QRS durati
Evaluation of left ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony as determined by phase analysis of ECG-gated SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging in patients with left ventricular dysfunction and conduction disturbances
โ Scribed by Mark A. Trimble; Salvador Borges-Neto; Stuart Smallheiser; Ji Chen; Emily F. Honeycutt; Linda K. Shaw; Jaekyeong Heo; Robert A. Pagnanelli; E. Lindsey Tauxe; Ernest V. Garcia; Fabio Esteves; Frank Seghatol-Eslami; G. Neal Kay; Ami E. Iskandrian
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 331 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1071-3581
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โฆ Synopsis
Background. Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is approved for the treatment of patients with advanced systolic heart failure and evidence of dyssynchrony on electrocardiograms. However, a significant percentage of patients do not demonstrate improvement with CRT. Echocardiographic techniques have been used for more accurate determination of dyssynchrony. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) myocardial perfusion imaging has not previously been used to evaluate cardiac dyssynchrony. The objective of this study is to evaluate mechanical dyssynchrony as described by phase analysis of gated SPECT images in patients with left ventricular dysfunction, conduction delays, and ventricular paced rhythms.
Methods and
Results. A novel count-based method is used to extract regional systolic wall thickening amplitude and phase from gated SPECT images. Five indices describing the phase dispersion of the onset of mechanical contraction are determined: peak phase, phase SD, bandwidth, skewness, and kurtosis. These indices were determined in consecutive patients with left ventricular dysfunction (n โซุโฌ 120), left bundle branch block (n โซุโฌ 33), right bundle branch block (n โซุโฌ 19), and ventricular paced rhythms (n โซุโฌ 23) and were compared with normal control subjects (n โซุโฌ 157). Phase SD, bandwidth, skewness, and kurtosis were significantly different between patients with left ventricular dysfunction, left bundle branch block, right bundle branch block, and ventricular paced rhythms and normal control subjects (all P < .001) Peak phase was significantly different between patients with right ventricular paced rhythms and normal control subjects (P โซุโฌ .001). Conclusions. A novel SPECT technique for describing left ventricular mechanical dyssynchrony has been developed and may prove useful in the evaluation of patients for CRT. (
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## Background: A count-based method using technetium-99m sestamibi electrocardiography-gated myocardial perfusion single photon emission computed tomography imaging has been developed to extract the left ventricular (lv) regional phase of contraction (onset of mechanical contraction [omc]) througho