PMID: 9430456Jan 16, 1998Paper

Technetium-99m MIBI to assess coronary collateral flow during acute myocardial infarction in two closed-chest animal models

Journal of Nuclear Medicine : Official Publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine
T F ChristianE L Ritman

Abstract

Collateral flow is an independent determinant of infarct size in both animal and clinical studies of myocardial infarction. The purpose of this study was to quantitatively evaluate, in a closed-chest animal model, a noninvasive method of measuring coronary collateral flow over a wide spectrum of collateral flow rates from a tracer that can be injected during occlusion but measured after reperfusion. Fourteen animals underwent 40 min of coronary occlusion using a closed-chest technique. Two closed-chest models representing different rates of collateral flow were used: canine and porcine. Coronary blood flow was measured by radiolabeled microspheres. Collateral blood within the risk zone was estimated from the severity of 99mTc-sestamibi tomographic perfusion defect. Collateral blood flow was significantly higher in the canine model than it was in the porcine model. There was close agreement (r = 0.90) between absolute collateral flow by microspheres and the severity of the tomographic perfusion defect. These results suggest that an accurate noninvasive estimate of collateral blood flow can be provided by an intravenous injection of 99mTc-sestamibi.

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