Milanesi Ornella, Stellin Giovanni, Zucchetta Pietro
Pediatric Cardiac Unit, Department of Women and Child's Health, University Hospital of Padua, Padua, Italy.
Pediatric and Congenital Cardiac Surgery Unit, Department of Cardiac, Thoracic and Vascular Sciences, University Hospital of Padua, Padua, Italy.
Semin Nucl Med. 2017 Mar;47(2):158-169. doi: 10.1053/j.semnuclmed.2016.10.008. Epub 2017 Jan 10.
Accurate cardiovascular imaging is essential for the successful management of patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). Echocardiography and angiography have been for long time the most important imaging modalities in pediatric cardiology, but nuclear medicine has contributed in many situations to the comprehension of physiological consequences of CHD, quantifying pulmonary blood flow symmetry or right-to-left shunting. In recent times, remarkable improvements in imaging equipments, particularly in multidetector computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, have led to the progressive integration of high resolution modalities in the clinical workup of children affected by CHD, reducing the role of diagnostic angiography. Technology has seen a parallel evolution in the field of nuclear medicine, with the advent of hybrid machines, as SPECT/CT and PET/CT scanners. Improved detectors, hugely increased computing power, and new reconstruction algorithms allow for a significant reduction of the injected dose, with a parallel relevant decrease in radiation exposure. Nuclear medicine retains its distinctive capability of exploring at the tissue level many functional aspects of CHD in a safe and reproducible way. The lack of invasiveness, the limited need for sedation, the low radiation burden, and the insensitivity to body habitus variations make nuclear medicine an ideal complement of echocardiography. This is particularly true during the follow-up of patients with CHD, whose increasing survival represent a great medical success and a challenge for the health system in the next decades. Metabolic imaging using FDG PET/CT has expanded its role in the management of infection and inflammation in adult patients, particularly in cardiology. The same expansion is observed in pediatric cardiology, with an increasing rate of studies on the use of FDG PET for the evaluation of children with vasculitis, suspected valvular infection or infected prosthetic devices. The introduction in the clinical practice of the first integrated PET/MR scanners and the development of new radiopharmaceuticals, as fluorinated compounds for the study of myocardial perfusion, open new perspectives in the use of nuclear medicine techniques in pediatric cardiology, offering the potential of a detailed noninvasive morphofunctional characterization in many types of CHD.
准确的心血管成像对于先天性心脏病(CHD)患者的成功管理至关重要。长期以来,超声心动图和血管造影一直是儿科心脏病学中最重要的成像方式,但核医学在许多情况下有助于理解CHD的生理后果,量化肺血流对称性或右向左分流。近年来,成像设备取得了显著进步,尤其是在多探测器计算机断层扫描和磁共振成像方面,这使得高分辨率成像方式逐渐融入CHD患儿的临床检查中,减少了诊断性血管造影的作用。核医学领域也经历了类似的技术发展,出现了SPECT/CT和PET/CT扫描仪等混合型设备。改进的探测器、大幅提高的计算能力以及新的重建算法使得注射剂量显著减少,同时辐射暴露也相应大幅降低。核医学以安全且可重复的方式在组织层面探索CHD许多功能方面的独特能力得以保留。其非侵入性、对镇静的需求有限、低辐射负担以及对身体体型变化不敏感等特点,使其成为超声心动图的理想补充。在CHD患者的随访中尤其如此,这些患者存活率的不断提高是一项巨大的医学成就,但在未来几十年对卫生系统来说也是一项挑战。使用FDG PET/CT的代谢成像在成人患者感染和炎症管理中的作用不断扩大,尤其是在心脏病学领域。儿科心脏病学中也出现了同样的发展趋势,使用FDG PET评估血管炎、疑似瓣膜感染或感染人工装置患儿的研究越来越多。首批一体化PET/MR扫描仪引入临床实践以及新型放射性药物的开发,如用于心肌灌注研究的氟化化合物,为儿科心脏病学中核医学技术的应用开辟了新前景,为多种类型的CHD提供了详细无创形态功能特征描述的潜力。