Serial Exercise Thallium Myocardial Perfusion Scanning and Exercise Electrocardiography in the Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease

1979 
Summary: Serial exercise thallium-201 myocardial perfusion scanning (exercise and 4-hour redistribution) was compared to rest and exercise electrocardiography (ECG) for the detection of coronary artery disease in 125 patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease. All patients underwent coronary arteriography and 108 were found to have significant coronary artery lesions. The serial exercise thallium scan was significantly more sensitive than rest and exercise ECG in detecting coronary artery disease (94% v. 83% P <0.01). The sensitivity of a reversible thallium perfusion scan abnormality and a positive exercise ECG for detecting exercise induced myocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease was similar (69% v. 63%). The exercise thallium scan complemented the exercise EGG, and the sensitivity of the combined test was significantly greater than the exercise ECG alone (84% v. 63% P<0.001). The specificity for coronary artery disease of the exercise ECG was 65% and that of the exercise thallium-201 myocardial perfusion scan was 82% (P = NS). Thallium-201 myocardial perfusion scanning complements the rest and exercise ECG in the non-invasive detection of coronary artery disease.
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