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Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

Myocardial infarction redefined - A consensus document of The Joint European Society of Cardiology/American College of Cardiology Committee f or the redefinition of myocardial infarction

Joseph S. Alpert; Elliott M. Antman; Fred S. Apple; Paul W. Armstrong; Jean Pierre Bassand; A. B. De Luna; George A. Beller; Bernard R. Chaitman; Peter Clemmensen; E. Falk; M. C. Fishbein; Marcello Galvani; A Jr Garson; Cindy L. Grines; Christian W. Hamm; U. Hoppe; Allan S. Jaffe; Hugo A. Katus; J. Kjekshus; Werner Klein; Peter Klootwijk; C. Lenfant; D. Levy; R. I. Levy; R. Luepker; Frank I. Marcus; U. Naslund; M. Ohman; Olle Pahlm; Philip A. Poole-Wilson

This document was developed by a consensus conference initiated by Kristian Thygesen, MD, and Joseph S. Alpert, MD, after formal approval by Lars Rydén, MD, President of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), and Arthur Garson, MD, President of the American College of Cardiology (ACC). All of the participants were selected for their expertise in the field they represented, with approximately one-half of the participants selected from each organization. Participants were instructed to review the scientific evidence in their area of expertise and to attend the consensus conference with prepared remarks. The first draft of the document was prepared during the consensus conference itself. Sources of funding appear in Appendix A. The recommendations made in this document represent the attitudes and opinions of the participants at the time of the conference, and these recommendations were revised subsequently. The conclusions reached will undoubtedly need to be revised as new scientific evidence becomes available. This document has been reviewed by members of the ESC Committee for Scientific and Clinical Initiatives and by members of the Board of the ESC who approved the document on April 15, 2000.*


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003

ACC/AHA/ASE 2003 guideline update for the clinical application of echocardiography: Summary article: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association task force on practice guidelines (ACC/AHA/ASE committee to update the 1997 guidelines for the clinical application of echocardiography)

Melvin D. Cheitlin; William F. Armstrong; Gerard P. Aurigemma; George A. Beller; Fredrick Z. Bierman; Jack L. Davis; Pamela S. Douglas; David P. Faxon; Linda D. Gillam; Thomas R. Kimball; William G. Kussmaul; Alan S. Pearlman; John T. Philbrick; Harry Rakowski; Daniel M. Thys; Elliott M. Antman; Sidney C. Smith; Joseph S. Alpert; Gabriel Gregoratos; Jeffrey L. Anderson; Loren F. Hiratzka; Sharon A. Hunt; Valentin Fuster; Alice K. Jacobs; Raymond J. Gibbons; Richard O. Russell

The previous guideline for the use of echocardiography was published in March 1997. Since that time, there have been significant advances in the technology of echocardiography and growth in its clinical use and in the scientific evidence leading to recommendations for its proper use. Each section has been reviewed and updated in evidence tables, and where appropriate, changes have been made in recommendations. A new section on the use of intraoperative transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is being added to update the guidelines published by the American Society of Anesthesiologists and the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiologists. There are extensive revisions, especially of the sections on ischemic heart disease; congestive heart failure, cardiomyopathy, and assessment of left ventricular (LV) function; and screening and echocardiography in the critically ill. There are new tables of evidence and extensive revisions in the ischemic heart disease evidence tables. Because of space limitations, only those sections and evidence tables with new recommendations will be printed in this summary article. Where there are minimal changes in a recommendation grouping, such as a change from Class IIa to Class I, only that change will be printed, not the entire set of recommendations. Advances for which the clinical applications are still being investigated, such as the use of myocardial contrast agents and three-dimensional echocardiography, will not be discussed. The original recommendations of the 1997 guideline are based on a Medline search of the English literature from 1990 to May 1995. The original search yielded more than 3000 references, which the committee reviewed. For this guideline update, literature searching was conducted in Medline, EMBASE, Best Evidence, and the Cochrane Library for English-language meta-analyses and systematic reviews from 1995 through September 2001. Further searching was conducted for new clinical trials on the following topics: echocardiography in adult congenital heart disease, echocardiography for evaluation …


Circulation | 2010

2010 ACCF/AHA Guideline for Assessment of Cardiovascular Risk in Asymptomatic Adults A Report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines

Philip Greenland; Joseph S. Alpert; George A. Beller; Emelia J. Benjamin; Matthew J. Budoff; Zahi A. Fayad; Elyse Foster; Mark A. Hlatky; John McB. Hodgson; Frederick G. Kushner; Michael S. Lauer; Leslee J. Shaw; Sidney C. Smith; Allen J. Taylor; William S. Weintraub; Nanette K. Wenger

It is essential that the medical profession play a central role in critically evaluating the evidence related to drugs, devices, and procedures for the detection, management, or prevention of disease. Properly applied, rigorous, expert analysis of the available data documenting absolute and relative benefits and risks of these therapies and procedures can improve the effectiveness of care, optimize patient outcomes, and favorably affect the cost of care by focusing resources on the most effective strategies. One important use of such data is the production of clinical practice guidelines that, in turn, can provide a foundation for a variety of other applications, such as performance measures, appropriate use criteria, clinical decision support tools, and quality improvement tools. The American College of Cardiology Foundation (ACCF) and the American Heart Association (AHA) have jointly engaged in the production of guidelines in the area of cardiovascular disease since 1980. The ACCF/AHA Task Force on Practice Guidelines (Task Force) is charged with developing, updating, and revising practice guidelines for cardiovascular diseases and procedures, and the Task Force directs and oversees this effort. Writing committees are charged with assessing the evidence as an independent group of authors to develop, update, or revise recommendations for clinical practice. Experts in the subject under consideration have been selected from both organizations to examine subject-specific data and write guidelines in partnership with representatives from other medical practitioner and specialty groups. Writing committees are specifically charged to perform a formal literature review; weigh the strength of evidence for or against particular tests, treatments, or procedures; and include estimates of expected health outcomes where data exist. Patient-specific modifiers, comorbidities, and issues of patient preference that may influence the choice of tests or therapies are considered. When available, information from studies on cost is considered, but data on efficacy and clinical outcomes constitute …


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2010

2010 ACCF/AHA Guideline for Assessment of Cardiovascular Risk in Asymptomatic Adults

Philip Greenland; Joseph S. Alpert; George A. Beller; Emelia J. Benjamin; Matthew J. Budoff; Zahi A. Fayad; Elyse Foster; Mark A. Hlatky; John McB. Hodgson; Frederick G. Kushner; Michael S. Lauer; Leslee J. Shaw; Sidney C. Smith; Allen J. Taylor; William S. Weintraub; Nanette K. Wenger

Alice K. Jacobs, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair, 2009–2011 Sidney C. Smith, Jr, MD, FACC, FAHA, Immediate Past Chair, 2006–2008 [⁎⁎⁎][1] Jeffrey L. Anderson, MD, FACC, FAHA, Chair-Elect Nancy Albert, PhD, CCNS, CCRN Christopher E. Buller, MD, FACC[⁎⁎⁎][1] Mark A. Creager, MD, FACC,


Circulation | 1997

ACC/AHA Guidelines for the Clinical Application of Echocardiography

Melvin D. Cheitlin; Joseph S. Alpert; William F. Armstrong; Gerard P. Aurigemma; George A. Beller; Fredrick Z. Bierman; Thomas W. Davidson; Jack L. Davis; Pamela S. Douglas; Linda D. Gillam; Alan S. Pearlman; John T. Philbrick; Pravin M. Shah; Roberta G. Williams; James L. Ritchie; Kim A. Eagle; Timothy J. Gardner; Arthur Garson; Raymond J. Gibbons; Richard P. Lewis; Robert A. O'Rourke; Thomas J. Ryan

### Preamble It is clearly important that the medical profession plays a significant role in critically evaluation of the use of diagnostic procedures and therapies in the management or prevention of disease. Rigorous and expert analysis of the available data documenting relative benefits and risks of those procedures and therapies can produce helpful guidelines that …


Circulation | 1983

Prediction of cardiac events after uncomplicated myocardial infarction: a prospective study comparing predischarge exercise thallium-201 scintigraphy and coronary angiography.

Robert S. Gibson; Denny D. Watson; G B Craddock; Richard S. Crampton; D.L. Kaiser; M J Denny; George A. Beller

The ability of predischarge quantitative exercise thallium-201 (201T1) scintigraphy to predict future cardiac events was evaluated prospectively in 140 consecutive patients with uncomplicated acute myocardial infarction; the results were compared with those of submaximal exercise treadmill testing and coronary angiography. High risk was assigned if scintigraphy detected 201T1 defects in more than one discrete vascular region, redistribution, or increased lung uptake, if exercise testing caused ST segment depression greater than or equal to 1 mm or angina or if angiography revealed multivessel disease. Low risk was designated if scintigraphy detected a single-region defect, no redistribution, or no increase in lung uptake, if exercise testing caused no ST segment depression or angina, or if angiography revealed single-vessel disease or no disease. By 15 +/- 12 months, 50 patients had experienced a cardiac event; seven died (five suddenly), nine suffered recurrent myocardial infarction, and 34 developed severe class III or IV angina pectoris. Compared with that of patients at low risk, the cumulative probability of a cardiac event was greater in high-risk patients identified by scintigraphy (p less than .001), exercise testing (p = .011), or angiography (p = .007). Scintigraphy predicted low-risk status better than exercise testing (p = .01) or angiography (p = .05). Each predicted mortality with equal accuracy. However, scintigraphy was more sensitive in detecting patients who experienced reinfarction or who developed class III or IV angina. When all 50 patients with events were combined, scintigraphy identified 47 high-risk patients (94%), whereas exercise-induced ST segment depression or angina detected only 28 (56%) (p less than .001). The presence of multivessel disease as assessed by angiography identified nine more patients with events than exercise testing (p = .06). However, the overall sensitivity of angiography was lower than that of scintigraphy (71% vs 94%; p less than .01) because three patients who experienced reinfarction and 10 who developed class III or IV angina had single-vessel disease. Importantly, 12 (92%) of these 13 patients with single-vessel disease who had an event exhibited redistribution on scintigraphy. These results indicate that (1) submaximal exercise 201T1 scintigraphy can distinguish high- and low-risk groups after uncomplicated acute myocardial infarction before hospital discharge; (2) 201T1 defects in more than one discrete vascular region, presence of delayed redistribution, or increased lung thallium uptake are more sensitive predictors of subsequent cardiac events than ST segment depression, angina, or extent of angiographic disease; and (3) low-risk patients are best identified by a single-region 201T1 defect without redistribution and no increased lung uptake.


Circulation | 1993

Quantitative planar rest-redistribution 201Tl imaging in detection of myocardial viability and prediction of improvement in left ventricular function after coronary bypass surgery in patients with severely depressed left ventricular function.

Michael Ragosta; George A. Beller; Denny D. Watson; Sanjiv Kaul; Lawrence W. Gimple

BackgroundAlthough many patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD) and severely depressed left ventricular (LV) function will benefit from coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG), surgeons may be reluctant to perform CABG on these patients without evidence of myocardial viability in regions of severe asynergy. We hypothesized that quantitative planar rest-redistribution 201Tl imaging would identify viable myocardium and predict improved regional and global function after revascularization in patients with depressed LV function and CAD. Methods and ResultsTwenty-one patients (mean LV ejection fraction, 0.27±0.05) were studied. Regional and global LV functions were evaluated before and 8 weeks after CABG with radionuclide ventriculography. Segments were prospectively classified as showing normal, mildly reduced, or severely reduced viability on the basis of quantitative analysis of defect severity and redistribution on planar resting 201Tl imaging. By 201Tl criteria, 90% of hypokinetic segments were classified with normal or mildly reduced viability. Among akinetic or dyskinetic segments, 20% had normal 201TI uptake, 53% had mildly reduced viability, and only 27% had severely reduced viability. 201TI viability criteria identified segments that improved function after CABG. Sixty-two percent of severely asynergic segments with normal viability and 54% with mildly reduced viability improved function after surgery, but only 23% with severely reduced viability improved function (p=0.002). When only adequately revascularized segments were considered, the predictive value of a positive preoperative viability scan for functional improvement was 73%. The greatest improvement in global LV function after CABG occurred in patients with the greatest number of asynergic segments classified as viable before surgery (p<0.01). In 10 patients with more than seven viable, asynergic segments, mean LV ejection fraction increased significantly after CABG (0.29±0.07 to 0.41±0.11, p=0.002). In 11 patients with seven or fewer viable, asynergic segments, mean LV ejection fraction remained unchanged after revascularization (0.27±0.05 to 0.30±0.08, p=NS). ConclusionsIn patients with CAD and severely depressed LV function, preoperative quantitative planar rest-redistribution 201TI imaging identifies viability in many asynergic myocardial segments, and these segments frequently improve function after CABG. The presence of numerous asynergic but viable myocardial segments before surgery correlated significantly with improvement in global LV function after bypass surgery.


Circulation | 1977

Differentiation of transiently ischemic from infarcted myocardium by serial imaging after a single dose of thallium-201.

Gerald M. Pohost; L M Zir; R H Moore; Kenneth A. McKusick; Timothy E. Guiney; George A. Beller

Myocardial 201TI uptake and regional blood flow by the microsphere technique were determined in anesthetized dogs undergoing either 20 min of coronary occlusion and 100 min of reperfusion (N = 10) or 120 min of occlusion (N = 4). In both groups, 201TI was injected intravenously after 10 min of occlusion. In transiently occluded dogs, regional flow at the time of 201TI administration was reduced to 8 ± 3% of normal flow in endocardial layers of the central ischemic zone. After 100 min of reperfusion, flow values were not significantly different from normal. 201TI activity after reperfusion rose to 56 ± 5% of normal, demonstrating that redistribution of the radionuclide occurred during the reflow period. In animals with persistent occlusion, there was a significant relationship between 201TI uptake and flow (r = 0.95) and no evidence of redistribution of 2lTl during the two hour occlusion period. In another five dogs receiving 201TI, serial gamma camera images obtained during reperfusion showed increasing uptake of the tracer in apical defects which returned to normal by 4 hours of reflow.Thirteen patients with stable angina received 2 mCi of 201TI intravenously at peak exercise, and multiple gamma camera images obtained serially. All demonstrated zones of diminished 201TI uptake 10 min after exercise. Defects which partially or completely disappeared within 1–6 hours postexercise corresponded to areas supplied by coronary arteries with significant stenoses. Persistent defects were present in regions of old myocardial infarction. Six additional patients with acute myocardial infarction demonstrated 201TI myocardial defects which showed no significant change over 6 hours.Thus, redistribution of 201TI into ischemic myocardium was demonstrated during transient coronary occlusion in dogs and after exercise stress in man. Sequential imaging after a single dose of 201TI at the time of exercise may provide a means for distinguishing between transient perfusion abnormalities or ischemia and myocardial infarction or scar.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003

ACC/AHA/ASE 2003 guideline update for the clinical application of echocardiography

Melvin D. Cheitlin; William F. Armstrong; Gerard P. Aurigemma; George A. Beller; Fredrick Z. Bierman; Jack L. Davis; Pamela S. Douglas; David P. Faxon; Linda D. Gillam; Thomas R. Kimball; William G. Kussmaul; Alan S. Pearlman; John T. Philbrick; Harry Rakowski; Daniel M. Thys; Elliott M. Antman; Sidney C. Smith; Joseph S. Alpert; Gabriel Gregoratos; Jeffrey L. Anderson; Loren F. Hiratzka; Sharon A. Hunt; Valentin Fuster; Alice K. Jacobs; Raymond J. Gibbons; Richard O. Russell

This document was approved by the American College of Cardiology Foundation Board of Trustees in May 2003, by the American Heart Association Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee in May 2003, and by the American Society of Echocardiography Board of Directors in May 2003. When citing this document, the American College of Cardiology, American Heart Association, and American Society of Echocardiography request that the following citation format be used: Cheitlin MD, Armstrong WF, Aurigemma GP, Beller GA, Bierman FZ, Davis JL, Douglas PS, Faxon DP, Gillam LD, Kimball TR, Kussmaul WG, Pearlman AS, Philbrick JT, Rakowski H, Thys DM. ACC/AHA/ASE 2003 guideline update for the clinical application of echocardiography: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (ACC/AHA/ASE Committee to Update the 1997 Guidelines for the Clinical Application of Echocardiography). 2003. American College of Cardiology Web Site. Available at: www.acc.org/clinical/guidelines/echo/index.pdf. This document is available on the World Wide Web sites of the American College of Cardiology (www.acc.org), the American Heart Association (www.americanheart.org), and the American Society of Echocardiography (www.asecho.org). Single copies of this document are available by calling 1800-253-4636 or writing the American College of Cardiology Foundation, Resource Center, at 9111 Old Georgetown Road, Bethesda, MD 20814-1699. Ask for reprint number 71-0264. To obtain a reprint of the Summary Article published in the September 3, 2003 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology, the September 2, 2003 issue of Circulation, and the October 2003 issue of the Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography, ask for reprint number 71-0263. To purchase bulk reprints (spec© 2003 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association, Inc.


Circulation | 1997

Improved Outcome After Coronary Bypass Surgery in Patients With Ischemic Cardiomyopathy and Residual Myocardial Viability

Paul R. Pagley; George A. Beller; Denny D. Watson; Lawrence W. Gimple; Michael Ragosta

BACKGROUND Although residual myocardial viability in patients with coronary artery disease and extensive regional asynergy is associated with improved ventricular function after coronary bypass surgery, the relationship between viability and clinical outcome after surgery is unclear. We hypothesized that patients with poor ventricular function and predominantly viable myocardium have a better outcome after bypass surgery compared with those with less viability. METHODS AND RESULTS Seventy patients with multivessel coronary artery disease and left ventricular ejection fractions < 40% who underwent preoperative quantitative 201Tl scintigraphy before coronary bypass surgery were analyzed retrospectively. 201Tl scintigrams were reviewed blindly, and each segment was assigned a score based on defect magnitude. Segmental viability scores were summed and divided by the number of segments visualized to determine a viability index. The viability index was significantly related to 3-year survival free of cardiac event (cardiac death or heart transplant) after bypass surgery (P=.011) and was independent of age, ejection fraction, and number of diseased coronary vessels. Patients with greater viability (group 1; viability index > 0.67; n=33) were similar to patients with less viability (group 2; viability index < or = 0.67; n=37) with respect to age, comorbidities, and extent of coronary artery disease. There were 6 cardiac deaths and no heart transplants in group 1 patients and 15 cardiac deaths and two transplants in group 2 patients. Survival free of cardiac death or transplantation was significantly better in group 1 patients on Kaplan-Meier analysis (P=.018). CONCLUSIONS We conclude that resting 201Tl scintigraphy may be useful in preoperative risk stratification for identification of patients more likely to benefit from surgical revascularization.

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Mirta Ruiz

University of Virginia

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David K. Glover

University of Virginia Health System

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Dennis A. Calnon

Riverside Methodist Hospital

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