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Showing papers by "Alan Rozanski published in 1983"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two factors are responsible for the temporal decline in specificity: a change in the population being tested (pretest referral bias) and a preferential selection of patients with a positive test response for coronary angiography (post-test referral bias).
Abstract: Although exercise radionuclide ventriculography was initially reported to be a highly specific test for coronary-artery disease, later studies reported a high false-positive rate. To verify this turnabout, we analyzed the responses in 77 angiographically normal patients; 32 were studied from 1978 to 1979 (the early period), and 45 from 1980 to 1982 (the recent period). Most patients studied in the early period had normal responses (94 per cent for ejection fraction and 84 per cent for wall motion). In contrast, normal responses were less frequent in patients studied in the recent period (49 per cent for ejection fraction and 36 per cent for wall motion, P<0.001). The probability of coronary disease before testing was higher in these patients (38 vs. 7 per cent, P<0.001). More patients studied in the recent period underwent radionuclide ventriculography before angiography (78 vs. 22 per cent, P<0.001), and more of these prior studies had abnormal results than those performed after angiography (55 ...

322 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The time to completed TI-201 redistribution following stress appears to be related to the severity of stenosis in the coronary artery supplying the defect, and late redistribution is associated with the presence and early redistribution with the absence of a significant stenosis.

159 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The analysis of pulmonary thallium washout provides an objective measurement of abnormal pulmonaryThallium activity and is more sensitive than other methods; it correlates with both the extent of coronary artery disease and the degree of exercise-induced left ventricular dysfunction, and improves the sensitivity of quantitative myocardial Thallium scintigraphy to detect the presence of coronary arteries disease.

59 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that catecholamine stimulation is responsible for paradoxical wall motion improvement after upright exercise is supported.
Abstract: Exercise generally aggravates ischemic myocardial dysfunction, presumably by increasing tissue oxygen demand out of proportion to the increase in supply. Nevertheless, resting left ventricular (LV) wall motion abnormalities can improve dramatically after upright exercise. To investigate this "paradoxical" phenomenon, we performed upright bicycle exercise equilibrium radionuclide ventriculography in 93 patients with angiographic coronary artery disease. Immediately after exercise, LV end-diastolic volume was similar to the resting level (1 +/- 22% of rest value), but end-systolic volume (ESV) was significantly below (p less than 0.05) that at rest (-11 +/- 32%) and LV ejection fraction increased significantly compared with rest (0.57 +/- 0.16 vs 0.51 +/- 0.13, p less than 0.05). Improvement in resting myocardial asynergy was frequent (115 of 330 abnormal segments), and was observed more commonly in patients without pathologic Q waves and in segments manifesting mild rather than severe asynergy. In 60 additional patients with resting asynergy who were also studied after nitroglycerin (NTG), there was 89% concordance of wall motion response in asynergic segments after exercise and NTG: 71 of 85 segments manifesting improvement with NTG also improved after exercise, and 157 of 172 segments without improvement with NTG also failed to improve after exercise. Despite the similar wall motion response, the mechanism of improvement is probably different from that produced by NTG. With NTG, preload (end-diastolic volume) and afterload (systolic blood pressure) were significantly lower than their resting control levels (p less than 0.05). These changes did not occur after exercise. Instead, an isolated, significant reduction in ESV was noted. These data support the hypothesis that catecholamine stimulation is responsible for paradoxical wall motion improvement after upright exercise.

55 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comparison of planar scintigraphy and seven-pinhole tomography to detect the presence of significant CAD and to localize it correctly to an individual coronary artery found both techniques to be highly sensitive and specific for disease detection and localization.

12 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The value of right ventricular thallium-201 analysis in detecting proximal right coronary artery stenosis in exercise myocardial scintigraphy was analyzed and it was found that the additional analysis of the right ventricle on thallia-201 stress scintigrams can improve the detection of proximalright coronary artery valve stenosis.
Abstract: The value of right ventricular thallium-201 analysis in detecting proximal right coronary artery stenosis in exercise myocardial scintigraphy was analyzed in 52 patients, 27 with and 25 without proximal right coronary artery stenosis. For the detection of proximal right coronary artery stenosis, the sensitivity and specificity of thallium scintigraphic analysis were 59 and 88% for a right ventricular abnormality, 67 and 68% for a left ventricular inferior wall abnormality, and 93 and 56% for an abnormality of either. When both right and left ventricular thallium images were abnormal, all 9 patients had proximal right coronary artery stenoses, and when both were normal, 26 of 28 patients had a normal proximal right coronary artery. The sensitivity and specificity of blood pool scintigraphic variables during exercise (right ventricular ejection fraction and left ventricular inferior wall motion) were not significantly different for detection of proximal right coronary artery stenosis. Thus, the additional analysis of the right ventricle on thallium-201 stress scintigrams can improve the detection of proximal right coronary artery stenosis. When both right ventricular and left ventricular thallium scintigrams are abnormal (or normal), the ability to predict the presence (or absence) of proximal right coronary artery stenosis is very high.

11 citations