Abstract: | Midventricular hypertrophy (MVO) is a rare and complicated myocardial disease. Its pathophysiology and prognosis remain unknown, and few nuclear cardiological findings for MVO were reported. On a 44-year old man with MVO, thallium-201 (Tl) myocardial scintigraphy and gated blood pool scintigraphy (GPS) were performed to evaluate their usefulness. GPS revealed a characteristic hour-glass deformity of the left ventricular cavity, apical aneurysm and asynchrony due to obliteration of the midventricle. Anteroseptal hypertrophy in midventricle and myocardial damage in apico-inferior region were detected by Tl. Thus, nuclear cardiological studies are proved to be useful and essential in not only diagnosis but also evaluating pathophysiology and observing natural history noninvasively. |