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Syllabus
Glossary
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1a: History
1b: Guidelines
1c: Epidemiology
1d: Structure
1e: Circulation
Lesson 1 REVIEW
2a: Anomalies
2b: Dextrocardia
2c: Coronary Arteries
2d: Indicators of Function
Lesson 2 REVIEW
3a: Electrophysiology
3b: Conduction
3c: Action Potential
3d: Autonomic System
Lesson 3 REVIEW
4a: Electrocardiography
4b: EKG Slideshow
4c: EKG Interpretation
4d: Myocardial Damage
Lesson 4 REVIEW
5a: Cardiovascular Disease
5b: Coronary Syndromes
5c: Atherosclerosis
5d: Myocardial Infarction
5e: Cardiac Stress Testing
5f: Cardiac Medications
5g: Revascularization
Lesson 5 REVIEW
6a: Diagnostic Imaging
6b: Radiopharmaceuticals
6c: Thallium Scintigraphy
6d: Tc99m MPI Agents
6e: PET Imaging
6f: Blood Pool Imaging
6g: Cardiac Function
Lesson 6 REVIEW
7a: Planar Cardiac Imaging
7b: Cardiac SPECT Imaging
7c: Cardiac SPECT Anatomy
7d: Interpretation
7e: Attenuation Correction
Lesson 7 REVIEW
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LESSON 6f page 1
CARDIAC BLOOD POOL IMAGING: An Overview
Assessing left ventricular function is integral in the evaluation of CAD because the severity of abnormal function is a strong predictor of prognosis.
Nuclear techniques noninvasively and reliably yield these measures for both the right and left ventricles. Quantitative indicators of cardiac function include heart rate,
cardiac output, arterial pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, stroke volume and ejection fraction. Ventricular volumes, ejection fraction and
exercise hemodynamics are the most important measures of cardiac performance, providing global and regional information about cardiac pump function.
The first attempt to assess cardiac function using radiotracers was made in 1948 by the renowned American Cardiologist Dr. Myron Prinzmetal. With an IV
bolus of sodium-24, and with an ink-writing GM tube placed over a patient’s pericardium, Dr. Prinzmetal demonstrated deflections representing right and left ventricular motion.
Radionuclide ventricular function studies can be broadly divided into two types:
• Multigated Blood Pool Imaging (MUGA Scan)- RESTING and EXERCISE
• First Pass Ventricular Function Studies -RESTING and EXERCISE
Blood Pool Imaging Reveals
qualitative indicators of function such as WALL MOTION ABNORMALITIES (hypokinesis, akinesis, and aneurysm) of the left ventricular wall and INTRACARDIAC SHUNTS.
The RADIONUCLIDE ANGIOGRAM is a physiologic, safe, noninvasive procedure that is easy to perform and to repeat without undesirable side
effects or discomfort to the patient. It is much less expensive than either cardiac catheterization or conventional x-ray contrast angiography. The MUGA scan has been used for decades to evaluate global
and regional wall motion, to calculate the excursion of blood from the left or right ventricles, determine ventricular volumes and to obtain a stroke volume ratio. With the first pass technique we may quickly assess
wall motion abnormalities, left and right ejection fractions and ventricular volumes, calculate transit times and cardiac output and evaluate intracardiac shunts.
Different technical characteristics of first-pass and equilibrium methods account for their respective advantages and disadvantages. However, both provide ventricular volumes and temporal variations of
volume necessary for functional assessments. Since chamber blood volumes are proportional to the density of radioactive emissions emanating from the chamber, their determination is independent of geometric formulas.
This enables calculation of ventricular volumes in patients with irregular or misshapen ventricles, and for studies acquired during peak exercise, when diagnostically and prognostically important cardiac
functional abnormalities typically are evoked.
Following the intravascular injection of the radiotracer, the passage of radioactivity through the cardiopulmonary chambers is monitored by a scintillation camera, and images are sequentially recorded on computer
disk. Images of the initial-transit or first pass of radioactivity and equilibrium blood pool pictures are assessed qualitatively and/or quantitatively.
FIRST PASS RADIONUCLIDE ANGIOGRAPHY shows a tight bolus of injected
radiotracer in its first transit through the right heart and lungs, then
back through the left heart and out the aorta. Both techniques may be
performed at rest or exercise, and same day rest and exercise studies
are possible. Because more sophisticated equipment is needed to perform
the first pass exam correctly, the planar MUGA scan is more commonly found in
the average nuclear medicine department or testing office.
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