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Cardiology Institute

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CT coronary angiography - Cases

March 6, 2016 Andrew To
Curved reconstruction in CT coronary angiography

Curved reconstruction in CT coronary angiography

Scenario 1:

A 45-year-old man with no prior cardiac history, but with cardiovascular risk factors including a 10-pack-year smoking history stopped last year, 5-year history of Type II diabetes on Metformin, obesity with BMI of 37, without a family history of premature coronary artery disease, now presented with exertional but inconsistent central chest tightness.

He was investigated extensively, including a negative exercise tolerance ECG at 13 minutes without symptom or ECG change.  Despite reassurance, his chest pain continued at random, and has not resolved with a course of Omeprazole for presumed non-cardiac (possibly gastrointestinal reflux) chest pain.

What should we do?

-       Reassure him that this pain is almost certainly non-cardiac

-       Perform a stress echocardiogram as it has a higher sensitivity than an exercise ECG

-       Perform an invasive angiography

Scenario 2:

A 50-year-old woman with no prior cardiac history, but with her only cardiovascular risk factor being essential hypertension on thiazides for last 5 years, now presented with atypical chest pain at rest and never on exertion.

She was again investigated extensively, with a positive exercise tolerance ECG at 9 minutes, with 1-2 mm inferolateral ST depression at peak exercise and early recovery.

What should we do?

-       Reassure her that this pain is almost certainly non-cardiac.  The exercise tolerance test must have been falsely positive.

-       Perform a stress echocardiogram as it has a higher specificity than an exercise ECG

-       Perform an invasive angiography

Scenarios explained

Both scenarios are classic dilemmas that cardiologists face. One cannot assert that one particular option is always right or wrong.  The pre-test probability of obstructive coronary artery disease in both cases is reasonably small, but not absolutely zero. 

Performing invasive angiogram will almost certainly lead to a significant probability of normal or near-normal coronary angiograms, arguing that risks associated with the invasive procedure might have been unnecessary.  Reassurance will almost certainly be fine most of the time, except the infrequent cases where obstructive coronary artery disease is missed.  

CT coronary angiography could therefore be considered for both these scenarios, and in more general terms, cases with intermediate probability of finding of obstructive coronary artery disease.

Because of intrinsic limitations of CTCA, interpretation could be difficult, and should be in the context of the clinical picture, as well as the scan quality. A collaborative team approach between imaging and interventional cardiologists is essential.

 

Author:

Dr Andrew To

In Cardiac Investigations Tags CT coronary angiography, chest pain, echocardiography, stress echcoardiography, coronary artery disease
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CT coronary angiography - How good is it?

March 6, 2016 Andrew To
CT coronary angiography - volume rendered image of the left anterior descending artery and its branches

CT coronary angiography - volume rendered image of the left anterior descending artery and its branches

CT coronary angiography

CT coronary angiography has now been routinely performed, at least in the Waitemata area since 2011, where we were the first to implement CTCA in the workup of acute chest pain in New Zealand.

There has been significant improvement in image quality and radiation dose reduction. Depending on body habitus, most scans with prospective ECG gating can be done with 1mSv (background radiation = 3mSv/year).

CTCA provides anatomical information on coronary artery stenosis, similar to invasive angiography. 

This is different to to routine functional testing such as exercise treadmill ECG (ETT), exercise stress echocardiogram (ESE), nuclear stress test or even adenosine stress MRI.

Compared to invasive angiography,

CTCA has a high negative predictive value. i.e. normal CTCA with good image quality means that the patient does not have coronary artery disease. This can be said with a high degree of confidence.

However, CTCA has moderate positive predictive value. When plaques are seen, we may not be able to quantify the exact severity. This depends entirely on image quality.

CTCA has changed how we should deploy the various tests for troponin-negative chest pain.

- Suitable patients may proceed directly to CTCA rather than exercise treadmill testing to rule out coronary artery stenosis.

- In others, CTCA should be used instead of invasive angiography. This minimises risks and complications!

 

Author:

Dr Andrew To

In Cardiac Investigations Tags coronary artery disease, chest pain, CT coronary angiography, echocardiography, stress echcoardiography, exercise stress ECG
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