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Screening for silent ischemia with coronary artery calcium artery calcium and nuclear stress testing.

Research Authors
Ferramosca E., Di Felice A., Ratti C., Ligabue G., Ibrahim D., Modena M.,Romagnoli R., Bagni B., Alberto, Raggi P.
Research Department
Research Journal
Journal of Nephrology
Research Publisher
NULL
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
19(4)
Research Website
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17048205/
Research Year
2006
Research_Pages
473-480
Research Abstract

Whether coronary artery calcium (CAC) screening in pretransplant patients may help predict silent myocardial ischemia is unknown. Accordingly, we performed CAC imaging on 46 nondiabetic patients awaiting kidneytransplant. All patients underwent multidetector computed tomography imaging for CAC quantification, and a vasodilator myocardial perfusion stress (MPS) test was performed only in patients with a total CAC score>300 or>100 in a single coronary artery. The mean patient's age was 46+/-14 years and the median dialysis vintage was 33 months (interquartile range 19-53). The median CAC score was 82 (interquartile range 0-700) and correlated with patients' age (p=0.006) and dialysis vintage (p=0.02). Nineteen patients qualified for MPS, but 5 refused the test. Of the remaining 14 patients, 7 patients had normal scans and 7 showed a minimal perfusion defect in the inferoposterior segment of the left ventricle. At the time of writing, 12 patients have undergone successful kidney transplantation without untoward complications. CAC screening does not appear to be associated with silent ischemia in pretransplant patients. Though CAC is extensive in dialysis patients, calcium may be associated with nonobstructive atherosclerotic lesions or calcification of the media layer of the vessel wall.