RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: We compared biventricular ejection fractions (EFs) from gated blood-pool single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) using a cadmium-zinc-telluride camera (CZT-SPECT) with planar equilibrium radionuclide angiography (ERNA) using a NaI gamma camera (NaI-planar). We also evaluated whether imaging time can be reduced without compromising image quality using the CZT camera. METHODS: Forty-eight patients underwent NaI-planar and CZT-SPECT on the same day. CZT-SPECT datasets were re-projected at an LAO orientation similar to ERNA acquisition, forming CZT-repro planar datasets. The resulting biventricular volumetric measurements and EFs were compared. RESULTS: LVEF calculated from CZT-SPECT and CZT-repro correlated better with NaI-planar (r = 0.93 and 0.99, respectively) than RVEF (r = 0.76 and 0.82, respectively). Excellent intra-class correlation and low bias in intra-observer comparisons were observed for the biventricular EFs derived from three datasets. A wider limit of agreement in CZT-SPECT-derived LVEFs, lower correlation and significant bias for NaI-planar, and CZT-repro-derived RVEFs was found in the inter-observer analyses. Nonetheless, the imaging time can be reduced to 4 minutes without increasing variability in EFs using the CZT camera (P = NS). CONCLUSIONS: LVEFs calculated from CZT-SPECT and CZT-repro correlated well with NaI-planar. CZT camera may reduce imaging time while preserving image quality in the assessment of biventricular EFs.