Nuclear - Image interpretation Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the findings and cause of the patients symptoms

  • 62 yo male with increasing SOB and LE edma
  • Projection image in the LAO position from the stress portion of a 1-day-rest/stress Tc99m SPECT MPI study is shown
A

Pulmonary Hypertension

  • marked RV hypertrophy and enlargement
  • relative paucity of lung uptake of Tc99m suggests possible COPD (frequent cause of pulmonary hypertension and RVH)
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2
Q

What is the cause of increased lung uptake when using Tl201 with stress?

A
  • severe ischemia
  • causes an increase in the lung-to-heart ratio
  • Caused by increased PCWP –> extravasation of Tl201 from intravascular space to the interstitial space
    • not reported with Tc99m agents
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3
Q

Based on the stress and rest projection images, which radioisotope imaging protocols was most likely use

A

1-day rest / stress Tc99m

  • based on grainy quality of the rest images (low count statistics) –> 1-day study using low-dose rest and high-dose stress
  • distribution consistent with Tc99m –> GI track and Liver
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4
Q

Desribe the findings and most likely cause of SOB:

A

COPD

  • marked thickening of the diaphragm recognized as a lucency starting fom the patient’s right abdominal wall and extending all the way to the heart
  • Dark appearance of diaphragm muscle between vascular lungs and liver
    • marked hypertrophy of diaphragm in COPD patients
    • *
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5
Q

Describe the findings:

  • 67 year old male with atypical chest pain
  • abnormal baseline EKG
  • Exercise SPECT MPI at 13.5 METS without anginal symptoms
A

Scaling artifact

  • circumferential decrease in counts that is most prominent on the short-axis slices relative to resting images
  • caused by a very hot apical anterior hot spot
  • incorrect scaling –> decreases subendocardial counts and may give the appearance of TID
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6
Q

Describe the findings and next step:

  • 60-year old female presents with chest pain to the ER
  • Exercise SPECT MPI is performed
A

Discharge for outpatient follow-up

  • normal study by visual and quantitative analysis
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7
Q

Describe the findings:

  • 58 year old female with progressive chest pain
  • Stress MPI is performed
A

coronary angiography

  • large area of severe ischemia involving the apex, septum, anterior and lateral walls
  • TID of the cavity
  • High risk scan consistent with:
    • proximal LAD or LM disease
    • severe MVCAD
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8
Q

Describe the findings:

  • 75 year old male with remote MI and atypical chest pain
  • Rb82 vasodilator PET study is performed
A

severe lateral wall ischemia and apical infarction

  • large area of severe lateral wall ischemia extending fom the apex to the base
  • apical infarction most prominent on the HLA and VLA images
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9
Q

Describe the findings, which artery is likely to be causing the symptoms in this patient?

A

RCA

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10
Q

Describe the findings:

  • 39 year old female with BMI 45 being evaluated for intestinal bypass surgery
  • PMH: HTN, DM, dyslipidemia
  • Pharmacologic SPECT MPI is performed (without AC) –> severe chest pain without EKG changes
A

uniform breast attenuation

  • images were acquired with a small filed of view camera with the patient sitting upright in a chair with the chest pressed against a stabilizing bar
  • raw projection image shows –> large left breast covering the entire heart –> uniformattenuation of the heart and not the focal decrease on the perfusion images seen in the anterior wall when there is only partial coverage of the heart by breast tissue
  • Right breast is seen on the right with a bright area in between due to liver and lung background that has less attenuation
  • Rotating projection images should be reviewed in cine mode on a workstation as part of QC for every study interpreted
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11
Q

Describe the findings and next step:

  • 85 year old female with multiple prior MI’s and CABG presents with worsening heart failure despite optimal medical therapy
  • SPECT MPI is performed
A

PET assessment of hibernation

  • extensive and severe areas of absent perfusion on the resting SPECT MPI involving the LAD and RCA territories with only the lateral wall showing perfusion
  • No evidence of ischemia
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12
Q

Describe the findings:

  • 46 year old female for pre-operative risk assessment
  • PMH: DM, HTN, dyslipidemia, obesity (5ft 8-inches tall, 434 pounds)
  • Pharmacologic 1-day rest/stress Tc99m perfusion studie with CT AC performed
A

Normal study

  • Apical defect –> apical thinning
    • recognized variant in obese patients with large BMI
    • due to overrepresentation of counts due to close proximity throughout the 180-degree acquisition is corrected
  • Multiple defects in this study (both attenuation –> confirmed by normal motion on gated images)
    • uniform breast attenuation
    • inferior wall diaphragmatic attenuation
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13
Q

What does a I-mIBG 123 study evaluate?

When is this study utilized?

A

myocardial sympathetic innervation

abnormal in heart failure syndromes and may be a marker of future cardiac events (including life-threatening arrhythmia and cardiac death)

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14
Q

What I-mIBG 123 finding is associated with the highest risk of cardiac events in heart failure patients?

A

mIBG heart-to-mediastinum ratio

  • calculated as:
    • the ratio of counts in a region of interest drawn over the heart
    • to the counts in a 7x7 pixel mediastinal reference region
  • uptake ratio < 1.60 correlated with increased time to first occurrence:
    • NYHA functional class progression
    • Arrhythmia (life-threatening)
    • Cardiac death
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15
Q

What are quantiative parameters obtained from I-mIBG 123 imaging studies?

A
  • mIBG washout rate
    • measure of retention of the tracer in the myocardium
  • mIBG heart-to-mediastinum ratio
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16
Q

Describe the findings and next step:

  • 62 year old female with atypical chest pain
  • no PMH
  • EKG and Troponin are negative
  • Exercise Tc99m SPECT MPI
    • 10:30 (12 METS) with no chest pain or ischemic changes on EKG
    • BP stable
    • EF 67%, TID 0.86
A

Low-risk abnormal SPECT MPI

  • Perfusion images:
    • mid and distal, inferolateral wall reversible defects
  • SDS 4 –> 7% of myocardium affected
    • 10% is generally considered the threshold for high-risk or severe ischemia
  • Duke treadmill score + 10.5 (low risk)
    *
17
Q

Describe the findings:

A

Severely abnormal study

  • moderate-severe reversible perfusion defects involving the septum and apex (consistent with LAD disease)
  • TID ratio 2.00

***MVCAD –> CABG

18
Q

What is the benefit of rest-only imaging studies

When can it be utilized effectively?

A
  • Simple and rapid protocol
  • Cost effective
  • Low-Moderate risk acute chest pain
  • Normal perfusion study with radiotracer injected during active chest pain
    • virtually excludes acute MI
    • cannot exclude chronic stable ischemic heart disease
19
Q

In what patient’s is rest-only imaging not-applicable?

A

prior MI

  • ​acute myocardial ischemia or infarction cannot be distinguished from an old MI
20
Q

What are limitations of rest-only imaging protocols?

A
  • Prior MI
    • cannot distinguish acute myocardial ischemia/infarction cannot be distinguished from an old MI
  • Attenuation artifact cannot be distinguished from myocardial ishcemia
    • normal wall motion does not definitively differentiate attenuation from abnormal perfusion (non-transmural infarction can still demonstrate normal wall motion)
  • Limited value in identifying acute ischemia after chest pain resolution
21
Q

What is the timing cut-off for rest-only imaging?

A
  • Active chest pain
  • ischemic symptoms resolved shortly ( < 3 hours) before testing
22
Q

Describe the findings:

  • 55 yo AA male presents after a syncopal event (fatigue, SOB, orthopnea, PND and weight gain)
  • EKG with complete heart block
  • CXR with cardiomegaly and hilar fullness
  • Echo: LVEF 35% with global hypokinesis
  • LHC: normal coronaries
  • N13 / F18-FDG PET is shown
A

Mismatch of the anteroseptum

  • decreased perfusion involving the basal and mid anterior, anteroseptum and inferoseptum with corresponding increased F18-FDG in the same distribution
23
Q

What is the sarcoidosis spectrum of disease on PET/CT?

A
  • Normal
    • normal perfusion / negative FDG
  • Non-specific
    • normal perfusion / diffuse FDG
  • Early disease
    • normal perfusion / focal increase of FDG
  • Mismatch pattern
    • abnormal perfusion / focal increase in FDG
  • Scar
    • abnormal perfusion / no FDG uptake
24
Q

Describe the findings/diagnosis:

  • 75 year old AA male with complaints of SOB and fatigue
  • PMH: HTN, dyslipidemia, CKD
  • Echo: LV thickening, grade 2 diastolic dysfunction, biatrial enlargement
  • Tc99m pyrophosphate imaging is shown
A

ATTR Amyloidosis

  • Both semi-quantitative visual scoring and
    • grade 2-3 myocardial uptake
  • Heart to contralateral ratio (H/CL) are used in clinical practice
    • H/CL > 1.5
    • H/CL > 1.6 –> associated with worse survival
25
Q

Describe the findings/diagnosis:

A

Pericardial Effusion

  • photopenic area seen circumferential to the heart
26
Q

Describe the findings/diagnosis:

  • 55 year old female presents to the ED with chest pain
  • PMH: HTN and dyslipidemia
  • EKG: deep T wave inversions throughout the anterior leads
  • Troponin negative
  • Exercise SPECT MPI is performed
A

Apical hypertrophic cardiomopathy

  • characteristic “solar polar” map pattern
    • results from increased apical counts at rest secondary to LVH
  • stress –> significant decrease in the apical counts with “relative” apical ischemia, even in the absence of CAD
27
Q

What are high-risk features on SPECT MPI?

A
  • perfusion defects in multiple vascular territories
  • increased Tl-201 lung uptake
  • LVEF < 40%
  • extensive hypoperfusion in one vascular territory
  • increased end-systolic and end-diastolic volumes
  • TID of LV cavity during stress
28
Q

Describe the findings and most common use

A

Equilibrium radionuclide angiocardiography (RNA) / MUGA

Effects of Chemotherapy

29
Q

What is RNA best utilized for?

A

Ventricular function (gold standard)

  • LV function
  • RV function
  • Chamber size
  • Dyssynchrony
30
Q

What is the next best step?

A

Exercise MPI

  • MPI added due to LVH with TWI –> may reduce specificity of the test
  • additional risk stratification provided by MPI would provide:
    • prognostic information
    • guidance for revascularization decisions
31
Q

Describe the findings and next step:

  • 58 year old female admitted with worsening DOE and heart failure
  • PMH: HTN and DM
  • Echo: mid-distal anterior, septal and apical akinesis with mild MR, and LVEF 30%
  • Vasodilator Tc99m SPECT: fixed, medium size, severe intensity perfusion defect involving mid to apical anterior, apical septal, mid anteroseptal, and LV walls
  • LHC: MVCAD with moderate-severe lesions in mid LAD, proximal RCA, mid-OM2
  • N13 / F18-FDG/CT is shown below
A

CABG - viable myocardium in LAD territory

  • Oragne –> viable myocardium
  • Green –> non-viable myocardium
32
Q

Describe the findings and next step:

  • 68 year old man with progressive DOE and exertional CP, left hip pain limits exercise capacity
  • PMH: obesity, hyperlipidemia, HTN
  • Vasodilator N13 PET/CT is performed
  • CFR = 1.1
A

coronary angiography

  • TID + CFR < 1.5 =
    • suggestive of significant epicardial disease involving the LM, proximal LAD or MVCAD
    • alternatively microvascular dysfunction
33
Q

What is her estimated annual risk of all-cause mortality?

A

High risk ( > 3%)

  • blunted heart rate response (HRR) during a regadenoson MPI study –> significantly increases risk of subsequent death or adverse CV outcomes
34
Q

What is the annualized risk of death with a blunted HRR during MPI study?

A
  • Abnormal MPI + blunted HRR
    • 9.6%
  • Normal MPI + blunted HRR
    • 7.5% annualized risk of death (high)
  • Normal MPI + Normal HRR
    • 1.7% if normal HRR
35
Q

What is the most appropriate next step?

A

ICD placement

  • FDG PET / SPECT MPI performed after 2 meals with no carbohydrates + high fat content + prolonged fasting –> usual protocol to identify inflmmation
  • Classic Sarcoidosis imaging findings:
    • ​reduced perfusion and increased FDG uptake
  • Focal perfusion defect + abnormal FDG uptake –> increased risk of death/VT
36
Q

What is the cardiac event rate associated with TID (abnormal study)?

A

1.8% vs. 0.7%

37
Q

Describe the findings and next step:

  • 50 year old male with burning, substernal chest discomfort that started 2 hours ago
  • PMH: obesity, HTN, HLD, GERD, tobacco abuse
  • EKG: NSR, nonspecific ST depression
  • Troponin negative
  • Rest Tc99m tetrofosmin MPI is performed
A

coronary angiography

  • acute rest perfusion imaging:
    • large perfusion defect in the inferior/inferolateral wall –> consistent with myocardial ischemia
  • abnormal acute rest MPI –> high probability of ACS
    • NPV –> 99-100%
    • NPV –> exclude cardiac events in medium-term follow up –> 97%
38
Q

Why is acute resting MPI a useful test in the ER setting?

A

NPV –> 99-100%​

  • abnormal acute rest MPI –> high probability of ACS –> LHC
  • NPV 97% –> exclude cardiac events in medium-term follow up
    • ensures safe discharge for stress testing to be completed a a later time
39
Q

What are findings on EKG that will preclude use of acute rest MPI?

A

Q waves –> prior MI

  • likely to have resting myocardial perfusion defects –> repeat MPI during a chest pain free period to distinguish new ischemia from old infarct