ナガオ ミチノブ
Nagao Michinobu
長尾 充展 所属 医学部 医学科(東京女子医科大学病院) 職種 准教授 |
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論文種別 | 原著 |
言語種別 | 英語 |
査読の有無 | 査読あり |
表題 | Papillary muscle ischemia on high-resolution cine imaging of nitrogen-13 ammonia positron emission tomography: Association with myocardial flow reserve and prognosis in coronary artery disease. |
掲載誌名 | 正式名:Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology 略 称:J Nucl Cardiol ISSNコード:10713581/15326551 |
掲載区分 | 国外 |
出版社 | Springer |
巻・号・頁 | pp.in press |
著者・共著者 | NAKAO Risako†, NAGAO Michinobu*, YAMAMOTO Atsushi,, FUKUSHIMA Kenji, WATANABE Eri, SAKAI Shuji, HAGIWARA Nobuhisa |
担当区分 | 責任著者 |
発行年月 | 2020/06 |
概要 | BACKGROUND:The evaluation of papillary muscle (PM) perfusion through existing perfusion imaging, including single-photon emission computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, is not possible. Therefore, this study sought to investigate the detection of PM ischemia in coronary artery disease (CAD) using nitrogen-13 (N-13) ammonia positron emission tomography (NH3 PET) and its association with global myocardial flow reserve (MFR) and major adverse cardiac events (MACE).METHODS:Data of adenosine-stress NH3 PET for 263 consecutive patients with known or suspected CAD were retrospectively analyzed. PM ischemia was defined as the absence of PM accumulation under stress conditions and PM presence at rest on high-resolution cine imaging derived from PET-computed tomography scanner with time-of-flight technology. The primary outcome was MACE.RESULTS:Of 263 patients, 30 experienced mean follow-up period of 910 days (MACE), while 31 (11.8%) presented PM ischemia. Compared to patients without PM ischemia, those with PM ischemia reported a significantly lower global MFR and a significantly higher rate of MACE (P < .0001).CONCLUSION:NH3 PET enables the detection of PM ischemia in approximately 10% of patients with known or suspected CAD. PM ischemia is associated with reduced global MFR and is an important sign in predicting prognosis. |
DOI | 10.1007/s12350-020-02231-z |
PMID | 32566962 |