To determine if incomplete redistribution at 4 h in exercise tomographic thallium-201 studies is always due to a myocardial scar, 141 patients were evaluated before and after a total of 160 successful percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty procedures. Thallium studies were analyzed using polar "bull's-eye" maps. For both immediate and delayed images, abnormalities were quantified as a thallium score by calculating a standard deviation-weighted sum of pixels greater than 2.5 SD below gender-matched normal limits. One hundred forty-four of 160 studies indicated abnormalities before angioplasty. Of these 144, incomplete redistribution occurred in 111 (77%): 16 (14%) in patients with and 95 (86%) in patients without prior Q wave myocardial infarction. After angioplasty, improvement in delayed image score occurred in 8 (50%) of 16 patients with prior infarction and 72 (76%) of 95 patients without prior infarction (p less than 0.05). After angioplasty, delayed images were normal in 1 (6%) of 16 patients with prior infarction and 32 (34%) of the 95 without (p less than 0.05). Before angioplasty, delayed image scores were positively correlated with scores in the immediate postexercise images in patients with (r = 0.84) and those without (r = 0.69) prior infarction. To determine if additional delayed images could help differentiate scar from ischemia, an 8 to 24 h delayed image was obtained in each of 40 other patients with incomplete redistribution at 4 h. Of 28 patients without prior infarction, 15 had no redistribution, and 13 had further redistribution at 8 to 24 h.
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