The high court yields of 99mTc-sestamibi make possible the acquisition of multiple gated SPECT studies with relatively high count densities. By reorienting these studies into gated short-axis slices, and extracting the three-dimensional myocardial perfusion distribution, we can study wall thickening using an amplitude and phase analysis methodology that examines the change in counts throughout the cardiac cycle. There have been two main concerns raised about this count-based technique: (1) What effect does the sampling rate have on the calculation of systolic wall thickening? and (2) What effect does count density have on the calculation of systolic wall thickening?
Methods: We designed a simulation study using myocardial wall thickening data obtained from ultrasonic crystals implanted in the myocardium of a normal canine. This data was modified to produce wall thickening curves with various percent systolic wall thickening measurements, sampling rates and count densities.
Results: The results show that using at least eight frames per cardiac cycle, systolic wall thickening can be calculated with enough accuracy to separate normal patients from those with cardiac dysfunction, even in areas of hypoperfused myocardium. Also, the results show the importance of calculating and interpreting phase (onset of contraction) information.
Conclusions: This count-based technique continues to show promise as a tool for calculating systolic wall-thickening from multiple gated myocardial perfusion SPECT studies, but needs to be validated in a prospective multi-center trial before being applied in a clinical setting.