Tamaki N, Yamada T, Matsumori A, Yoshida A, Fujita T, Ohtani H, Watanabe Y, Yonekura Y, Endo K, Konishi J
Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Kyoto University Faculty of Medicine, Japan.
J Nucl Med. 1990 Feb;31(2):136-42.
The diagnostic value of 111In-antimyosin (AM) imaging for identifying myocardial infarction was evaluated in comparison with 99mTc-pyrophosphate (PPi) imaging. Twenty-four patients with various stages of myocardial infarction, ranging from three days to nine months after the onset of infarction, underwent both AM and PPi scans. Of 26 infarct lesions AM scan identified 22 (85%), while PPi scans detected 10 (38%) (p less than 0.01). When less than a week had passed since the onset both scans demonstrated all infarct lesions. For seven subacute lesions studied within one to two weeks of onset, AM scans detected (100%), while PPi scans identified only 2 (29%). Furthermore, AM scans showed discrete myocardial uptake in 7 (64%) of those studied more than two weeks after onset. The intensity of AM uptake in the infarcts studied more than seven days after onset was less than that in acute infarcts studied within seven days of onset (p less than 0.05). These preliminary data indicate that the abnormal myocardial uptake of AM persists beyond the first two weeks when PPi no longer accumulates. Thus, AM scans can be considered to provide a sensitive diagnosis of subacute as well as acute myocardial necrosis.