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. 2017 May;45(5):1419-1428.
doi: 10.1002/jmri.25483. Epub 2016 Oct 12.

Effect of Nitroglycerin on the Performance of MR Coronary Angiography

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Effect of Nitroglycerin on the Performance of MR Coronary Angiography

Tobias Heer et al. J Magn Reson Imaging. 2017 May.

Abstract

Purpose: To systematically investigate the effect of sublingual glyceryl trinitrate (nitroglycerin=nitro=glyceryl trinitrate=GTN=C3 H5 N3 O9 [NTG]) on the diagnostic performance of MR coronary artery imaging (MRCA) to detect relevant coronary artery disease (CAD).

Materials and methods: Thirty-five healthy volunteers and 25 patients with suspected or proven CAD (all in sinus rhythm) underwent MRCA before and after NTG using a contrast-agent free, three-dimensional, navigator-based, steady state free precession acquisition (voxel size 1.0 × 0.7 × 0.7 mm3 ) at 1.5 Tesla. Target parameters were stenosis detection (>50%), visible vessel length (straightened planar reconstruction) and vessel diameter (curved planar reconstruction, measured proximal/medial/distal). In patients, invasive coronary angiography served as reference.

Results: NTG led to increase of the coronary diameter both in healthy volunteers (right coronary artery [RCA]: 3.2 to 3.7 mm, P < 0.001; left anterior descending coronary artery [LAD]: 2.9 to 3.4 mm, P = 0.009; left circumflex coronary artery [LCx]: 2.8 to 3.3 mm, P < 0.001) and patients (RCA 3.5 to 4.0 mm, P = 0.01; LAD 3.3 to 3.7 mm, P = 0.008; LCx: 2.9 to 3.3 mm, P = 0.03). Visible vessel length increased after NTG for the LAD (volunteers: 72 to 84 mm, P = 0.03; patients: 56 to 78 mm, P = 0.01) and for LCx (volunteers: 48 to 60 mm, P = 0.02). Sensitivity to detect > 50% stenosis improved after NTG from 88.0 to 96%, specificity from 46.5 to 69.8%, diagnostic accuracy from 61.8 to 79.4% and positive/negative predictive value from 48.9 to 64.9% and 87.0 to 96.8%, respectively.

Conclusion: Sublingual administration of NTG significantly enhanced the visibility of the coronary arteries and improved the detection of coronary artery stenosis.

Level of evidence: 2 J. MAGN. RESON. IMAGING 2017;45:1419-1428.

Keywords: coronary artery disease; magnetic resonance coronary angiography; nitroglycerine.

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