Introduction: Technetium-99m-sestamibi (MIBI) is the most frequently used myocardial perfusion tracer in patients with ischemic heart disease. In patients with acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction, we previously found that the defect in myocardial MIBI uptake was the same in patients injected with MIBI before primary angioplasty and in patients injected immediately after successful treatment. Thus, reperfusion may not be followed by increased uptake of MIBI. Instead, the MIBI defect after reperfusion may reflect the area at risk (AAR) defined by MIBI injected before treatment. We intended to investigate whether myocardial imaging with MIBI administered after reperfusion reflects myocardial perfusion or rather the ischemic AAR.
Methods: In 12 pigs, left anterior descending coronary artery was totally occluded for 45 min with an angioplasty balloon. After a 2-h reperfusion, MIBI was injected intravenously, and (153)Gd-microspheres were injected in left atrium. AAR and infarct size (IS) were determined by histochemical staining. MIBI and microsphere distribution were evaluated by counting the sliced left ventricle on a gamma camera. Defects were defined as uptake less than 45% of maximum uptake.
Results: The mean±S.D. defect size as a fraction of left ventricle was for MIBI 21%±5.5%, AAR 25%±6.3%, IS 13%±3.9% and microspheres defect size 7.3%±5.5%. MIBI defect size overestimated IS (P=.0005) and microspheres defect size (P=.0001), but it was not significantly different from AAR (P=.30).
Conclusion: In a porcine model of myocardial infarction after 45 min of ischemia, MIBI administered 120 min after reperfusion delineates AAR.
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