4.2 Article

Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy for Improving Non-Uniform Thickening of Left Ventricular Wall: Assessment by Quantitative Gated Myocardial Perfusion SPECT

Journal

TOHOKU JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE
Volume 251, Issue 2, Pages 69-79

Publisher

TOHOKU UNIV MEDICAL PRESS
DOI: 10.1620/tjem.251.69

Keywords

cardiac resynchronization therapy; dyssynchrony; heart failure; nuclear imaging; quantitative SPECT

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [19659193, 19790510]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19790510, 19659193] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) improves cardiac dyssynchrony in heart failure patients with a wide QRS electrocardiogram (ECG). Assessment of left ventricular (LV) dyssynchrony using echocardiography or other imaging modalities is important to predict CRT effectiveness. In this study, we retrospectively evaluated cardiac nuclear imaging of ECG-gated myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) with (99)mTc-sestamibi for CRT candidate (n = 120) with severe heart failure and wide QRS (> 120 msec) in ECG. To analyze LV non-uniformity, we used the quantitative gated SPECT (QGS) software to calculate changes in regional LV wall thickness during a cardiac cycle (i.e., wall thickening scores). Cardiac events (heart failure, ventricular arrhythmias and cardiac death) after CRT during 38 +/- 22 (SD) months were also evaluated. In 97 of 120 patients who underwent QGS before and 6 months after CRT, CRT homogenized non-uniform wall thickening between septa! and lateral of the LV especially in CRT responders. This observation was indicated as increase in the lateral deflection (X-WT) of wall thickening scores before CRT and its decrease after CRT. In 120 patients with QGS before CRT, the larger X-WT before CRT (>= 16.5) predicted better prognoses after CRT. This finding was similarly observed even in patients with narrower baseline QRS (<= 140 msec; n = 41 of 120), who usually have less benefits from CRT. In conclusion, CRT improved non-uniformity of wall thickening between the LV septal and lateral regions evaluated using QGS, which is predictive of better prognosis in the chronic phase after CRT.

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