A review of the study of heart scintigraphy, indications and contraindications to it

From this article you will learn: what is myocardial scintigraphy, what indications it is made, and when it is contraindicated. Preparation, conduct and possible complications of this survey.

The content of the article:

  • The essence of myocardial scintigraphy
  • Indications and contraindications for perfusion scanning of the heart
  • Preparation for myocardial scintigraphy
  • Carrying out perfusion scanning of the heart
  • Possible complications
  • Results

Myocardial scintigraphy( abbreviated SM) refers to the methods of visualization of the heart,amount of radioactive material. Other names are SM - heart scintigraphy, perfusion scan of the myocardium.

This examination is one of the most effective methods of determining the blood supply( perfusion) and the viability of the heart muscle, allowing it to assess it both at rest and under load( physical or medicamental).The method is very common in the US and European countries, but is rarely used in the countries of the former USSR, where infrequent CM is associated with the lack of modern equipment and the high cost of the survey.

instagram viewer

Essence of myocardial scintigraphy

To perform perfusion scanning of the heart into the human body, radionuclides are introduced - substances that emit gamma rays( one of the types of radiation).

Click on the image to enlarge

There are several kinds of radionuclides. For heart scintigraphy, those that accumulate in the heart muscle are used. Since radionuclides enter the heart through blood vessels, they accumulate in those parts of the myocardium that are well-blooded. Accordingly, the areas of the heart muscle with poor blood supply due to narrowing or overlapping of the coronary arteries do not accumulate radionuclides. This leads to the fact that the myocardium with good blood circulation will emit more gamma rays, and areas with poor blood circulation will be less.

Gamma rays - one of the types of radiation that can be detected with a special device - a gamma camera. Then the gamma camera turns them into electrical signals sent to a computer that outputs a color image of the heart. On the obtained image the areas of the myocardium with different accumulation of radionuclides are displayed in different colors.

Indications and contraindications for perfusion scanning of the heart

Myocardial scintigraphy is most often performed according to the following indications:

  1. Diagnosis of coronary heart disease and other heart diseases.
  2. Detection of localization and assessment of the degree of coronary artery disease in patients with coronary heart disease.
  3. Definition of prognosis in patients at risk of developing myocardial infarction.
  4. Evaluation of the viability of the myocardium in a region with partially impaired blood supply to address the issue of the feasibility of revascularization( surgical treatment aimed at restoring normal blood supply to the heart muscle).
  5. Heart examination after revascularization.

Perfusion cardiac scans are not performed by pregnant women and people who are allergic to the radionuclide drug being administered. There are contraindications to scintigraphy with physical stress on the heart, to which belong:

  • Acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina.
  • Stenosis of the left coronary artery.
  • Symptoms of left ventricular failure at rest.
  • Recently suffered severe cardiac rhythm disturbance.
  • Thromboembolism of the pulmonary artery in an acute period.
  • Active infective endocarditis, myocarditis or pericarditis.

Contraindications to medical stress on the heart:

  • acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina;
  • previous bronchospasm;
  • atrioventricular block or weakness syndrome of the sinus node( in the absence of a pacemaker);
  • arterial hypotension( systolic pressure <90 mmHg).
Click on photo to enlarge

Preparing for myocardial scintigraphy

It should be noted that some factors or conditions can affect the results of this survey. For example, they belong to:

  1. Recently suffered myocardial infarction.
  2. Myocarditis( inflammation of the heart muscle).
  3. The patient has an implanted pacemaker driver( pacemaker).
  4. Administration of drugs containing theophylline.
  5. Use of caffeine for 24 hours before examination.
  6. Use of medicines from the group of nitrates.
  7. Taking medications that slow heart rate( beta blockers).

Before performing perfusion cardiac scans, tell your doctor:

  • If you are pregnant or you may be pregnant.
  • If you are breastfeeding a baby( there is a risk of getting radionuclides into breast milk, so after testing breastfeeding is prohibited for 2 days).
  • About all the medications you take.
  • If you have a pacemaker implanted.
  • If you have any allergies or hypersensitivity to any medicines, contrast agents or iodine.

Immediately Before Examination:

  • Do not eat or drink anything at least three hours before the perfusion scan of the myocardium.
  • Wear comfortable shoes and free clothes that are suitable for exercise.
  • Remove all ornaments.

If a patient is scheduled to have a CM after physical or medication use, he should not drink alcohol for at least 24 hours:

  • ;
  • smoking;
  • Drink beverages containing caffeine;
  • take medicines containing theophylline or caffeine.

Performing perfusion scanning of the heart

Myocardial scintigraphy is usually performed at the radiology departments. The examination is carried out for 1 or 2 days, taking from 3 to 4 hours.

CM at rest

When carrying out a CM at rest, the patient is asked to undress to the waist and give him hospital clothes. To the chest can attach electrodes, through which doctors monitor cardiac activity during the examination.

A thin catheter is inserted into the vein on the arm, through which a small amount of radioactive preparation is introduced. Then the patient lies on the table, the doctors place a gamma camera above his thorax, which records the radionuclide signals and how they move with the blood. The gamma camera itself does not produce any radioactive radiation. During the scan, you must remain motionless. Gamma camera can move around the patient, making images from different angles.

CM after drug loading

The examination with drug loading is carried out in two stages.

  1. In the first stage, the scan is done after the administration of a certain drug( eg, adenosine), which causes the heart to work, as with physical exertion.
  2. The second - scintigraphy is carried out at rest.

These steps can change places.

Usually, the drug load is used when the patient can not perform physical exercises.

During this examination, the patient is first recorded an ordinary cardiogram. Then a drug is injected through the intravenous catheter, which can lead to headache, dizziness, hot flashes, nausea, and then a cardiogram is re-recorded and blood pressure is measured.

Four minutes after the administration of this drug, a radionuclide agent is administered intravenously. Then the patient needs to wait 30-60 minutes, after which he lays down on the table for scanning, which sometimes has to be repeated after 2 and 4 hours.

CM after physical exertion

Myocardial scintigraphy after physical exertion is also carried out in two stages. Physical exercise is most often performed in the form of exercises on a treadmill or on an exercise bike, during which an electrocardiogram and heart rate are monitored. At first the load is small enough, but every few minutes the speed of the treadmill or the resistance on the stationary bike increases. When the patient can no longer perform these exercises or when the frequency of contractions of his heart reaches the desired values, the load stops. Immediately after this, the radionuclide agent is injected intravenously, and the patient lies down on the table for scanning. Sometimes you may need additional pictures after resting for a certain time.

Sensations during myocardial scintigraphy

The scan itself is painless. During the examination:

  • You can feel an injection and burning sensation at the time of vein catheterization.
  • It can be inconvenient for you to lie on a table motionless for a sufficiently long period of time for scanning.
  • If you are using a heart medication, you may experience mild nausea, headache, dizziness, hot flashes, and chest pain. These symptoms last for several minutes.
  • If physical exertion is used, you may experience chest pain, shortness of breath, dizziness, pain in the leg muscles and fatigue. If these symptoms are very pronounced, they can stop physical activity.

Possible complications of

Myocardial scintigraphy is a fairly safe method of examination. Very rarely, a physical or medicamental load can cause arrhythmia or myocardial infarction.

Many people are frightened by the use of radioactive drugs for CM. However, the level of radiation used for this survey is very low and is completely safe. The radionuclide itself very quickly leaves the body. In most cases, the patient receives radiation that does not differ in size from several conventional X-ray images.

However:

  • There is a small risk that gamma rays can harm an unborn baby.
  • Very rarely, some people develop allergic reactions to injections.
  • Theoretically, an overdose is possible with the introduction of radionuclide agents.

Results of

The results of perfusion scanning are usually available after 1-3 days. They can be:

  1. Normal - radionuclides are evenly distributed throughout the myocardium.
  2. Abnormal - radionuclides are distributed unevenly over the cardiac muscle, there are foci of their increased or decreased absorption. This suggests that some parts of the myocardium do not receive enough blood( ischemia).