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Showing papers by "Michele Galli published in 1996"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Deceleration time of early filling is a powerful independent predictor of poor prognosis in patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic.

289 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The occurrence of reverse redistribution following reinjection expands the indication for viability imaging to all patients with known coronary artery disease and regional wall motion abnormalities who undergo diagnostic and prognostic 201TI scintigraphy.
Abstract: UNLABELLED Previous studies based on standard stress-redistribution 201TI scintigraphy provided conflicting results about the clinical significance 201Tl reverse redistribution. Recent observations indicate that the majority of these defects normalize following reinjection reflecting viable myocardium. METHODS In this study, the meaning of reverse redistribution occurring at reinjection imaging, its relation to standard 4-hr redistribution, coronary lesion, abnormal wall motion and tissue viability were assessed. A region with normal activity in the stress image was considered as having reverse redistribution if 201Tl activity at reinjection imaging was definitely abnormal with a decrease in relative tracer uptake >15% of the peak. From a series of 270 patients, 29 showed reverse redistribution. Of these 29 patients, 27 had evidence of previous myocardial infarction. Coronary lesions were detected in all but 1 patient. Average ejection fraction was 0.38 +/- 0.11. RESULTS On a segmental basis, 50/377 regions showed the pattern of reverse redistribution. A significant coronary lesion (> or = 50%) was found in 78% of these regions; occlusion rate was 50%, and collateral circulation was found in 35% of occluded vessels. Hypokinesis or akinesis was present in 72% of segments. Tissue viability, defined as an uptake >55% of the peak, was found in 44% of these segments. The 50 segments showing reverse redistribution were divided into two groups according to an abnormal uptake also at 4-hr redistribution (group 1, 25 segments) or appearing only following reinjection (group 2,25 segments). Despite segments of group 1 showing a higher degree of coronary stenosis (80 +/- 32 versus 59 +/- 43%, p < 0.01), a similar rate of coronary occlusion, ventricular dysfunction and maintained viability was found in the two groups. CONCLUSION Reverse redistribution in chronic coronary artery disease is frequently associated with significant coronary lesion, collateral-dependent dysfunctioning myocardium and preserved tissue viability. The occurrence of reverse redistribution following reinjection expands the indication for viability imaging to all patients with known coronary artery disease and regional wall motion abnormalities who undergo diagnostic and prognostic 201TI scintigraphy.

13 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comparison study of the binding of L-3H-nicotine to a single class of high affinity sites in rat brain and the preparation, metabolite studies and in vivo distribution in the human brain using PET.
Abstract: l. Kfimpfer I, Sorger D, Schliebs R, K~irger W, Giinther K, Schulze K, Knapp WH. Radioiodination of nicotine with specific activity high enough for mapping nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Eur J Nucl Med 1996; 23: 157-162. 2. Nyb~ick H, Halldin C, Ablin A, Curvall M, Eriksson L. PET studies of the uptake of (S)and (R) -11C-nicotine in the human brain: difficulties in visualizing specific receptor binding in vivo. Psychopharmacology 1994; 115:31-36. 3. Nordberg A, Lundquist H, Hartvig P, Lilja A, Langstr6m B. Kinetic analysis of regional (S)(-) llC-nicotine binding in normal and Alzheimer brains In vivo assessment using positron emission tomography. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 1995; 9: 21-27. 4. Lippiello PM, Fernandes KG. The binding of L-3H-nicotine to a single class of high affinity sites in rat brain. MoI Pharmacol 1986; 29: 448-454. 5. Anderson DJ, Arneric SR Nicotinic receptor binding of 3Hcytisine, 3H-nicotine and 3H-methylcarbamylcholine in rat brain. Eur J PharmacoI 1994; 253: 261-267. 6. Halldin C, Nagren K, Swahn CG, Langstr6m B, Nyb~ick H. (S)and (R)-11C-nicotine and the metabolite (R/S)-11C-cotinine. Preparation, metabolite studies and in vivo distribution in the human brain using PET. Nucl Med Biol 1992; 19: 871-880. Early reinjection of thallium-201 after stress imaging

1 citations