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What’s New in Cardiac Imaging?

SPECT, PET, and MRI

Ernst E. van der Wall H. Sochor A. Righetti M.G. Niemeyer

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English
Kluwer Academic Publishers
31 July 1992
Since the introduction of myocardial perfusion imaging and

radionuclide angiography in the mid-seventies, cardiovascular nuclear

medicine has undergone an explosive growth. The use of nuclear

cardiology techniques has become one of the cornerstones of the

noninvasive assessment of coronary artery disease. In the past 15

years major steps have been made from visual analysis to quantitative

analysis, from planar imaging to tomographic imaging, from detection

of disease to prognosis, and from separate evaluations of perfusion,

metabolism, and function to an integrated assessment of myocardial

viability.

In recent years many more advances have been made in cardiovascular

nuclear imaging, such as the development of new imaging agents,

reevaluation of existing procedures, and new clinical applications.

This book describes the most recent developments in nuclear cardiology

and also addresses new contrast agents in MRI.

What's New in Cardiac Imaging will assist the clinical

cardiologist, the cardiology fellow, the nuclear medicine physician,

and the radiologist in understanding the most recent achievements in

clinical cardiovascular nuclear imaging.
Edited by:   , , ,
Imprint:   Kluwer Academic Publishers
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   1992 ed.
Volume:   133
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 155mm,  Spine: 33mm
Weight:   1.170kg
ISBN:   9780792316152
ISBN 10:   0792316150
Series:   Developments in Cardiovascular Medicine
Pages:   550
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Further / Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. What’s new in cardiac imaging?.- 2. Why new cardiac imaging agents?.- Section one: Perfusion.- 3. The value of measuring myocardial perfusion in coronary artery disease.- Single photon imaging.- 4. Myocardial perfusion imaging with xenon-133.- 5. Myocardial perfusion and krypton-81m.- 6. Myocardial perfusion imaging with technetium-99m isonitriles; attractive thallium substitutes?.- 7. Is there a specific role for technetium-99m SestaMIBI in the assessment of cardiac arrhythmias?.- 8. Technetium-99m complexes of functionalized diphosphines for myocardial perfusion imaging in man.- 9. Myocardial perfusion imaging with technetium-99m teboroxime.- Positron emission tomography.- 10. Clinical applications of rubidium-82 myocardial perfusion imaging.- 11. Nitrogen-13 ammonia perfusion imaging.- 12. Quantification of myocardial perfusion with oxygen-15 water.- 13. Myocardial perfusion imaging with copper-62 labeled Cu-PTSM.- Magnetic resonance imaging.- 14. Application of contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging: additional value for detection of myocardial ischemia?.- 15. Magnetic resonance imaging using paramagnetic contrast agents in the clinical evaluation of myocardial infarction.- Section two: Metabolism.- 16. Assessment of myocardial metabolism in vivo. a biochemist’ view.- Single photon imaging.- 17. Myocardial metabolic imaging with iodine-123 fatty acids.- Positron emission tomography.- 18. Assessment of myocardial fatty acid metabolism with carbon-11 palmitate.- 19. Myocardial metabolic imaging with fluorine-18 deoxyglucose.- 20. Myocardial metabolic imaging with carbon-11-acetate.- Section three: Infarct-avid imaging.- Single photon imaging.- 21. Infarct-avid imaging: usefulness, problems and limitations.- 22. Myocyte necrosis-avid with radiolabeledantimyosin antibody: experimental and clinical acute myocardial infarction, myocarditis and heart transplant rejection.- 23. Myocardial infarct imaging with cardiac troponin-I antibodies.- Section four: Function.- Single photon imaging, positron emission tomography.- 24. Radionuclide imaging in the evaluation of cardiac function: new developments?.- Single photon imaging.- 25. Krypton-81m equilibrium radionuclide ventriculography for the assessment of right ventricular function.- 26. Simultaneous assessment of myocardial function and perfusion.- Section five: Sympathetic nerve system.- Single photon imaging.- 27. Radiolabeled metaiodobenzylguanidine (1-123 MIBG): value in clinical cardiology?.- 28. Scintigraphic assessment of cardiac innervation using iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine.- 29. Clinical experience with iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine.- Positron emission tomography.- 30. Studies of cardiac receptors by positron emission tomography.- 31. Heart neuronal imaging with carbon-11- and fluorine-18-labeled tracers.- Section six: Leukocytes, platelets, lipoproteins.- Single photon imaging.- 32. Labeling of leukocytes, platelets, and lipoproteins: useful in clinical cardiology?.- 33. Indium-111 leukocyte scintigraphy for detection of valvular abscesses and vegetations.- 34. Detection of cardiac thrombi with indium-111 platelet scintigraphy.- 35. Scintigraphic detection of atherosclerosis with radiolabeled low density lipoprotein.- Section seven: Viability.- Single photon imaging, positron emission tomography, magnetic resonance imaging.- 36. Assessment of myocardial viability with scintigraphic techniques and magnetic resonance imaging: new attainments?.- Positron emission tomography.- 37. Is it worth assessing regional myocardial viability with positron emissiontomography?.- 38. Assessment of tissue viability after myocardial infarction with fluorine-18 deoxyglucose using planar imaging; the alternative approach.- Section eight: Alternative stress imaging.- Single photon imaging, echocardiography, magnetic resonance imaging.- 39. New developments in pharmacological stress imaging.

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