New CT scan may speed up heart disease diagnosis with less radiation

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New computarised tomography (CT) technology appears to provide faster, more accurate heart scans for both viewing blood vessels in the heart and measuring blood supply to the heart muscle, while exposing patients to less radiation, researchers report in Circulation: Cardiovascular Imaging, a journal of the American Heart Association.

In preliminary tests from a small trial of 39 patients, computerised tomography (CT) scans called 2nd generation 128 Slice Dual Source “Flash” CT captured quicker images of the entire heart, allowing doctors to better see artery blockages and reduced blood flow through the heart. This was accomplished using a tenth of the radiation of current CT scans, the standard test for diagnosing and pinpointing the location of heart disease.


The CT scan uses a high-pitch “Flash” CT scan technique, which enables an ultrafast scan time. A contrast agent and vasodilatator is injected into the patient’s blood vessels to help highlight certain areas.


“The new exam is faster and more convenient for the patient,” said Gudrun M Feuchtner, a study co-author.

The new technology captures images of the entire heart in less than 0.3 seconds within one heart beat as compared to 6 seconds and several heart beats for conventional CT scans.


For accuracy, the new scan was compared to cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and invasive angiogram, which involves snaking a catheter through an artery in the groin or arm to the heart. An angiogram, and sometimes MRI, requires contrast dye.


Compared to cardiac MRI, 78% to 95% of the time the new CT correctly identified restricted blood flow and correctly ruled it out 84% to 94% of the time. Compared to invasive angiography, the new CT had 90% accuracy in detecting significant blockages. The new CT’s accuracy improved to 95% when added to CT perfusion a scan taken after using contrast dye.


The scan proved particularly useful in patients with advanced heart disease or diabetic patients who reported no symptoms, but were found to have areas of poor coronary blood flow, Feuchtner said. Because people with diabetes may have nerve damage, they may not alwaysexperience the chest pains that typically accompany reduced blood flow to the heart.


“Those patients would not immediately seek a cardiologist, but would have a poor prognosis,” said Feuchtner, a professor in the Department of Radiology at the Innsbruck Medical University in Innsbruck, Austria.


The study findings can also help to plan heart surgery more accurately, according to Andre Plass, a co-author and cardiac surgeon from University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland.


The new technology answers two questions with one scan: whether the blood vessels of the heart are narrowed and whether there is reduced blood flow.


“This can have important implications for cost savings and efficiency as two studies are done in one setting,” said Ricardo C Cury, co-author of the study and chairman of radiology at Baptist Health of South Florida, USA.


Larger studies are needed before the new technology is widely used, researchers said.


Co-authors from University Hospital Zürich, where the study was performed, include: Robert Goetti, Andre Plass, Monika Wieser, Hans Scheffel, Christophe Wyss, Paul Stolzmann, Olivio Donati, Johannes Schnabl, Volkmar Falk, Hatem Alkadhi, Sebastian Leschka, Ricardo C Cury.