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CT scan effective in ruling out
blockages of heart blood vessels
The use of a non-invasive CT scan for the diagnosis of significant
narrowing or blockage of the heart blood vessels was proven to be
reliable by MUSC investigators in one of the first studies reported
worldwide. The results were announced last week at the Radiological
Society of North America meeting in Chicago and two weeks earlier at
American Heart Association's Annual Scientific Sessions in Dallas.
The collaborative team, composed of researchers from MUSC’s Department
of Radiology and Division of Cardiology, investigated the accuracy of
the most cutting-edge generation of computed tomographic (CT)
scanners—the 64-slice scanner—to diagnose narrowing and blockages of
the heart blood vessels. Such narrowing and blockages are responsible
for chest pain and heart attacks, the number one killer in the United
States.
MUSC investigators studied 80 consecutive patients who underwent both
an invasive heart catheterization and the non-invasive 64-slice CT
scan. The research team found that not a single patient with
significant narrowing or blockage of the heart blood vessels was missed
by the non-invasive CT scan, when compared to the traditional heart
catheterization.
The traditional heart catheterization requires the insertion of a tube
directly into the heart blood vessels through an incision in the groin.
The CT scan only requires injection of a small amount of dye in an arm
vein, while images of the heart are taken. The scan takes only 10
seconds to complete.
“There were some minor inaccuracies of the CT scan for pinpointing the
exact location of narrowing in the heart blood vessels in some cases,”
said Joseph Schoepf, M.D., one of the study’s principal investigators.
“And in three patients, we overcalled the narrowing, which turned out
to be less severe than we thought based on the CT scan. However, we’d
rather err on the side of caution by overcalling areas of narrowing
than missing significant disease in our patients.”
Dr. Peter Zwerner
“But the good news,” added cardiologist Peter Zwerner, M.D., the other
principal investigator, “is that we did not miss a single patient with
significant narrowing or blockage of the heart blood vessels that would
have required treatment. This means that based on a normal,
non-invasive CT scan, we can safely rule out significant narrowing and
blockages of the heart vessels in a patient with suspected coronary
heart disease, so that the patient does not require a heart
catheterization.”
The investigators plan to focus future research on further improvement
of the accuracy of CT scanning of the heart, the use of CT scans for
rapid diagnosis of acute chest pain in the emergency department, and
the evaluation of heart function.
Friday, Dec. 9, 2005
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