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      Usefulness of 64-slice multidetector computed tomography in diagnostic triage of patients with chest pain and negative or nondiagnostic exercise treadmill test result.

      The American Journal of Cardiology
      Adult, Aged, Angina Pectoris, etiology, pathology, radiography, Calcinosis, Chest Pain, Coronary Angiography, Coronary Artery Disease, complications, Coronary Stenosis, Exercise Test, False Negative Reactions, False Positive Reactions, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Retrospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Triage

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          Abstract

          The usefulness of 64-slice multidetector coronary computed tomography (MDCT) in a diagnostic triage of 100 consecutive patients (age 55.8+/-11.6 years; 57% men) with chest pain suspected to be ischemic in origin and a negative or nondiagnostic exercise treadmill test (ETT) result was examined. None of the patients had previously known coronary artery disease (CAD). MDCT showed obstructive (>or=50%) CAD in 29 patients; 13 of 59 patients (22%) with a negative and 16 of 41 patients (39%) with a nondiagnostic ETT result. High-risk (left main and/or 3-vessel) CAD was present in 3.3% of patients with a negative and 4.9% with a nondiagnostic ETT result. The 29 patients with obstructive CAD on MDCT had a higher mean Agatston calcium score (221+/-402 vs 40+/-77 U, p<0.001). Invasive coronary angiography confirmed MDCT findings in 26 of 29 patients (positive predictive value 90%) and 45 of 54 stenotic segments (83%) in a per-segment analysis. For the 71 patients without obstructive CAD on MDCT, clinically driven invasive angiography detected CAD in 1 of 15 patients (1 false-negative MDCT result) and 2 of another 5 patients who were referred for invasive angiography later during a 12-month follow-up period. In the remaining 51 patients, MDCT findings effectively allowed exclusion of obstructive CAD, and there were no major adverse clinical events during follow-up. In conclusion, in patients with chest pain possibly ischemic in origin, no previously known CAD, and a negative or nondiagnostic ETT result, contrast-enhanced 64-slice MDCT scanning was a useful tool to provide direct noninvasive coronary angiography and rapidly advance diagnostic triage.

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