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Value of radionuclide ventriculography in the immediate characterization of patients with acute myocardial infarction
Authors:C.Fagg Sanford  James Corbett  Pascal Nicod  George L. Curry  Samuel E. Lewis  Gregory J. Dehmer  Allan Anderson  Barbara Moses  James T. Willerson
Affiliation:From the Departments of Internal Medicine (Division of Cardiology) and Radiology at the University of Texas Health Science Center and Parkland Memorial Hospital, Dallas, Texas, U.S.A.
Abstract:The ability of admission radionuclide ventriculography to discriminate among various clinical subsets was evaluated in patients with acute myocardial infarction. One hundred patients with acute myocardial infarction were evaluated within 8 ± 3.1 hours (mean ± standard deviation) after the onset of chest pain. Forty-one patients were in Killip functional class I, 52 in class II and 7 in class III. The mean radionuclide left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly lower in patients with higher Killip classification because of significant elevation of mean left ventricular end-systolic volume rather than significantly altered mean end-diastolic volume. Killip classification frequently failed to correlate with ejection fraction in individual cases. Admission chest X-ray findings were categorized according to the presence of findings suggestive of impaired left ventricular function. Mean left ventricular ejection fraction was significantly lower in patients with abnormal than in patients with normal chest X-ray findings because of significant elevations in both mean end-diastolic and end-systolic volumes. The chest X-ray findings frequently failed to correlate with ejection fraction in individual cases.Stepwise linear regression analysis was employed to analyze the ability of historical, physical, electrocardiographic and chest X-ray findings to predict radionuclide left ventricular ejection fraction. The most predictive variables in order of decreasing significance were anterior myocardial infarction, abnormal chest X-ray findings, rales to two thirds of the posterior thorax, previous myocardial infarction, transmural myocardial infarction and heart rate greater than 100 beats/min. However, even these six optimal predictive variables could explain only 42 percent of the observed variability in left ventricular ejection fraction. Thus, early radionuclide ventriculography adds significantly to the discriminant power of clinical and radiographic characterization of ventricular function in patients with acute myocardial infarction.
Keywords:Address for reprints: C. Fagg Sanford   MD   University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas   5323 Harry Hines Boulevard   Room L51134   Dallas   Texas 75235.
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