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1.
Nuklearmedizin ; 44 Suppl 1: S18-23, 2005.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16395974

RÉSUMÉ

PET/CT is now established as the most important imaging tool in oncology. PET/CT stages and restages cancer with a higher accuracy than PET or CT alone. The sometimes irrational approach to combine state of the art PET with the highest end CT devices should give way to a more reasonable equipment design tailored towards the specific clinical indications in well-defined patient populations. The continuing success of molecular PET/CT now depends more upon advances in molecular imaging with the introduction of targeted imaging probes for individualized therapy approaches in cancer patients and less upon technological advances of imaging equipment.


Sujet(s)
Tumeurs/imagerie diagnostique , Tomographie par émission de positons/normes , Tomodensitométrie/normes , Femelle , Humains , Stadification tumorale , Tumeurs/anatomopathologie , Tomographie par émission de positons/tendances , Reproductibilité des résultats , Logiciel , Tomodensitométrie/tendances
2.
Circulation ; 99(22): 2921-6, 1999 Jun 08.
Article de Anglais | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10359737

RÉSUMÉ

BACKGROUND: Detection of myocardial viability is important in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy. Restoration of blood flow to viable myocardium is associated with improved left ventricular function and improved patient prognosis. However, the prevalence of viable myocardium in patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy is unknown. METHODS AND RESULTS: To determine the prevalence of myocardial viability, clinical [13N]ammonia/18F-deoxyglucose PET studies performed in 283 patients (age, 63+/-10 years) with ischemic heart disease (mean ejection fraction, 26+/-8%) were visually analyzed for the presence and extent of viable and nonviable myocardium. The myocardium was divided into 19 segments. The extent of viable myocardium was considered "functionally" significant if >/=5 segments ( approximately 25% of the left ventricular myocardium) exhibited a blood flow/metabolism mismatch and "prognostically" significant if 1 to 4 left ventricular segments did so. Of all patients, 41% had no evidence of viable myocardium, 55% had viable myocardium, and 4% had normal blood flow and metabolism within an enlarged left ventricle. Functionally significant viability was found in 27% and prognostically significant viability in 28% of the patients. Multivariate analysis revealed the presence of angina to be the only clinical parameter associated with the presence of functionally significant viability. CONCLUSIONS: Revascularization might improve patient prognosis in 55% and result in improved left ventricular function in 27% of all patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy.


Sujet(s)
Coeur/imagerie diagnostique , Coeur/physiopathologie , Ischémie myocardique/imagerie diagnostique , Ischémie myocardique/physiopathologie , Tomoscintigraphie , Sujet âgé , Circulation coronarienne , Femelle , Transplantation cardiaque , Humains , Mâle , Adulte d'âge moyen , Ischémie myocardique/traitement médicamenteux , Ischémie myocardique/chirurgie , Revascularisation myocardique , Survie tissulaire
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