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Published in: Journal of Nuclear Cardiology 3/2021

Open Access 01-06-2021 | Intravascular Ultrasound | IMAGES THAT TEACH

Reverse redistribution-like change on dipyridamole-stress 99mTc-tetrofosmin imaging in a patient with angiographically mild coronary artery stenosis

Authors: Tadao Aikawa, MD, PhD, Naohiro Funayama, MD, Daisuke Sunaga, MD, PhD, Keigo Kayanuma, MD, Noriko Oyama-Manabe, MD, PhD, Daisuke Hotta, MD, PhD

Published in: Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | Issue 3/2021

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Excerpt

A 50-year-old man with a 1-month history of chest pain presented to our hospital. Transthoracic echocardiography showed normal left ventricular wall motion. Coronary computed tomography angiography revealed a mild stenosis with low-density non-calcified plaque in the proximal left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) (Figure 1A, yellow arrows); therefore, the patient underwent a 1-day protocol of dipyridamole stress and rest 99mTc-tetrofosmin myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI). Baseline electrocardiography was normal; however, he developed angina 8 minutes after the start of .56 mg·kg−1 (.14 mg·kg−1·min−1 for 4 minutes) of intravenous dipyridamole infusion and his electrocardiogram showed ST-segment elevation in the precordial leads (Figure 2). After intravenous aminophylline with sublingual nitroglycerin was given, the ST-segment elevation was gradually resolved. Stress MPI showed no perfusion defect (Figure 1B) with abnormal wall motion in the anterior and septal walls on gated MPI (Supplementary Material). He had recurrent angina after the stress MPI. Rest MPI at 2 hours after the stress test showed reverse redistribution-like reduced uptake in the LAD territory (Figure 1B) with normal left ventricular wall motion on gated MPI (Supplementary Material). As with the coronary computed tomography, invasive coronary angiography via the right radial artery demonstrated the mild stenosis in the proximal LAD (Figure 3, yellow arrow). Intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography images showed coronary plaque with neovascularization (Figure 3, red arrows) and small thrombi (Figure 3, white arrows) at the minimum lumen area site, indicating the increased vulnerability of the coronary plaque.1 Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with a drug-eluting stent (4.0 × 33 mm) was successfully performed (Figure 3, red arrows). On the day following the PCI, he underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing and did not present with chest pain at peak exercise (VO2 at peak was 22.5 mL·kg−1·min−1 [6.4 METs]).
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Literature
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Metadata
Title
Reverse redistribution-like change on dipyridamole-stress 99mTc-tetrofosmin imaging in a patient with angiographically mild coronary artery stenosis
Authors
Tadao Aikawa, MD, PhD
Naohiro Funayama, MD
Daisuke Sunaga, MD, PhD
Keigo Kayanuma, MD
Noriko Oyama-Manabe, MD, PhD
Daisuke Hotta, MD, PhD
Publication date
01-06-2021
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology / Issue 3/2021
Print ISSN: 1071-3581
Electronic ISSN: 1532-6551
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12350-021-02553-6

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