Thursday, February 12, 2009

Life Imitates Art

A year or so back, I wrote a post about a hypothetical hybrid ultrasound/CT scanner, which was intended to tweak a nose here and there.

Imagine my amusement when I discovered that someone out there was merging cardiac echo with SPECT scanning, an even less-likely combination. But it's true. An article in the Journal of Nuclear Medicine by Walimbe, et. al., describes the process:

Early experience is described in implementing a new multimodality stress test for accurate correlation of complementary functional and perfusion information from real-time 3-dimensional (3D) echocardiography and SPECT, respectively. The proposed new multimodality stress test has the potential for simultaneously improving sensitivity and specificity in the detection of early coronary artery disease (CAD).

Methods: Pre- and poststress real-time 3D echocardiography and SPECT images were acquired in 20 patients referred for CAD evaluation and processed using previously developed algorithms for automatic fusion and quantitative analysis of myocardial function and perfusion. All cases of CAD were diagnosed by reviewing quantitatively analyzed fused images, using newly developed software.

Results: Real-time 3D echocardiography, SPECT, advance
processing, and image review were successfully performed in all 20 patients. Compared with the angiographic findings in 12 patients, diagnosis based on fused images correctly identified 13 of 13 diseased arteries, compared with 11 of 13 identified by SPECT and 6 of 13 identified by echocardiography-based analysis.

Conclusion: The results suggest the feasibility and potential effectiveness of novel multimodality stress testing.

OK, so it isn't in one box. Yet. Here's the protocol and the results page:

Hybrid strength wins again. Maybe the Squawkie and the Cymbal aren't too far off, after all?!

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