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INEFFECTIVENESS OF DIPYRIDAMOLE SPECT THALLIUM IMAGING AS A SCREENING TECHNIQUE FOR CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE IN PATIENTS WITH END-STAGE RENAL FAILURE
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1990
Year
Heart FailureCoronary Artery DiseaseAcute Myocardial InfarctionRenal FunctionVascular ImagingChronic Kidney DiseaseCardiologyNormal Thallium ImagingAtherosclerosisRadiologyHealth SciencesCardiovascular ImagingMyocardial InfarctionMedical ImagingKidney FailureUrologyCardiovascular DiseaseCoronary UnitSpecificity 73MedicineNephrologyCoronary Artery
The efficacy of dipyridamole single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) thallium as a screening test for coronary artery disease (CAD), was studied in 45 patients with end-stage renal failure undergoing evaluation for renal transplantation. Coronary arteriography, dipyridamole SPECT thallium imaging and clinical follow-up were performed in all patients. Nineteen patients (42%) had an obstruction of 50% or more in at least one coronary artery. Fourteen patients had a positive thallium scan, but 7 of these were false-positives (sensitivity 37%, specificity 73%). The sensitivity was considerably lower than that quoted for non-ESRF patients in the literature, and significantly lower than a control group of 19 patients without ESRF having comparable severity and distribution of CAD. Five of the 6 patients who died of cardiac causes over a mean follow-up period of 25 months had normal thallium imaging, but all had significant coronary artery disease at cardiac catheterization. Dipyridamole SPECT thallium imaging has not proved a useful screening test for angiographically significant CAD, and does not predict cardiac prognosis in this population.