Iskandrian A S, Wasserman L A, Anderson G S, Hakki H, Segal B L, Kane S
Am J Cardiol. 1980 Oct;46(4):553-8. doi: 10.1016/0002-9149(80)90502-0.
Stress thallium-201 myocardial perfusion images were obtained in 65 patients with an inconclusive exercise electrocardiogram. All 65 patients underwent coronary angiograpic studies. The exercise electrocardiogram was judged inconclusive in 35 patients (54 percent) because submaximal exercise had been performed and in 30 patients (46 percent) who manifested ST-T segment abnormalities at rest. Exercise thallium-201 myocardial perfusion images were abnormal in 20 patients and normal in 45. Nineteen (95 percent) of the 20 patients with abnormal exercise images had severe disease of one or more major coronary arteries. Thirty-seven (82 percent) of the 45 patients with normal exercise images had no significant coronary artery disease; the remaining 8 patients had coronary artery disease. Therefore, 19 of 27 patients with coronary artery disease had abnormal exercise images (sensitivity 70 percent), and 37 of 38 patients without coronary artery disease had normal exercise images (specificity 97 percent). Thallium-201 imaging predicted the correct diagnosis in 56 patients (86 percent). Thus, exercise myocardial imaging with thallium-201 appears to be a useful diagnostic aid in patients with an inconclusive exercise electrocardiogram.