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I'm going to talk about medications

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we give in cardiac CT imaging.

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As radiologists, we're used to giving one medication,

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which is iodinated contrast, and of course gadolinium.

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We're not used to giving cardiac medication,

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which sometimes induces fear in us,

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but I want to keep this very simple.

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And so, not to overwhelm you with cardiac pharmacology,

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which, quite honestly, I have forgotten from my

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medical school days, but mostly to tell you about

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a couple of medications we give quite often.

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The first is metoprolol, which is a beta blocker.

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It's a short- to intermediate-acting beta

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blocker that can be given orally or intravenously.

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Oral is the preferred method and the

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guidelines that we use are weight-based.

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Weight-based is not perfect but

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it's still a good heuristic to use.

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Anybody less than 40 pounds gets

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50 milligrams initially of oral.

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Remember, not intravenous, oral.

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Intravenous doses are much lower.

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140 to 160 pounds, they get 75 milligrams

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and 160 pounds, they get 100 milligrams.

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So who gets them?

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Why do they get them?

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So we give the medication to people who have

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heart rates that are greater than 70 beats

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per minute, and there's nothing wrong with

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a heart rate of 70 or 75 beats per minute.

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We just want to get it to lower than 70 beats

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per minute, so that we get an optimal scan.

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So, a lower heart rate is like taking a

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picture of a tree on a moving train,

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and you can imagine that the picture is

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much better when the train is moving slower.

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So, in a sense, we're trying to

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lower the speed of the train.

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The shutter speed, temporal

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resolution, metoprolol, doesn't affect.

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Those are other concepts which

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we will discuss later on.

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So metoprolol is the first-line drug

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and probably the most common drug.

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I would say probably the only drug we should be using.

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If you need to use anything more than that, then

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it's probably best to involve cardiologists.

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I use it if the heart rate is greater than 70.

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And after giving the medication, I have the techs

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check the heart rate in about 20 to 25 minutes.

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And I repeat it

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to a maximum of 150, 200 milligrams

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to get the heart rate less than 70.

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If it's going in the right direction, if it

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starts off, let's say 110 and you're at 75,

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that means it's trending in the right direction.

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Sometimes it just doesn't budge and you

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just have to make a call at that point,

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whether you want to do the scan or not.

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So metoprolol has contraindications, and these

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are cardiac drugs that we're talking about.

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But before I go into that, I'll

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talk about the intravenous method.

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The intravenous method is shorter-

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lasting than the oral method.

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So the oral method should be overwhelmingly

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more preferred than the intravenous.

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And you should never rush these studies.

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These studies should take, should be done,

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without being rushed, because if you rush them,

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then you can get a poor-quality result with intravenous.

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You want to give two and a half milligrams

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every minute to a maximum of 15 milligrams.

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Some might push it to 20, but

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certainly not more than 20.

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You want to check the blood pressure continuously

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because it's an intravenous medication, and you

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want to check the heart rate every five minutes.

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But it's not a course I would recommend,

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I would recommend almost always the oral method.

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So what are the contraindications?

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So it's a beta blocker, so, um, one of the

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contraindications is that if the patient has asthma,

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because, as you know, the beta receptors are present

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also in other smooth muscles, such as in the airway.

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Asthma gets a bit tricky because a lot of people

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are on inhalers, but they're not really asthmatic.

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They might have taken an inhaler 10 years

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ago and then been given a diagnosis of asthma.

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So you have to use your clinical judgment there.

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So, um, the way to kind of understand the

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significance of the asthma, the first thing

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to ask is, have you ever been admitted to a machine?

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in the intensive care unit with

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an attack of status asthmaticus.

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If that's the answer, then

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yes, it's clearly contraindicated.

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If they take inhalers daily for

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symptom relief, it's contraindicated.

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If they've been given a diagnosis of asthma,

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but you also notice that they're on oral

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metoprolol for heart failure or whatever, then

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of course it's not contraindicated by logic.

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Hypertension, of course, so

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always check the blood pressure.

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So we do this for patients who have heart rates greater

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than 70, but anybody who has a heart rate that is, you

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know, bradycardic, obviously they don't need the

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metoprolol, but it's also a contraindication to it.

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So it's kind of a moot point, but it's a

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contraindication, so you might see somebody with

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heart rates running at 50 to 60 beats per minute with

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a diagnosis of second or third degree heart block.

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Clearly contraindicated and clearly not necessary.

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Pregnancy.

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Tend to avoid aortic stenosis is one of those,

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uh, funny ones where, you know, uh, if it's

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very severe and you lower the blood pressure,

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you can precipitate a hypertensive attack

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because the aortic valve is static as well.

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So, you know, anybody with complex cardiac

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conditions that you're not sure of, just avoid.

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I mean, there's a whole lot of them.

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There are fancy arrhythmias like Wolf-Parkinson-White

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and you can just go through a whole list and

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just the important thing is that you keep it simple.

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People who don't have

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coexisting cardiac disease and

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are generally fit and well.

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There are alternatives, but if you're at that point,

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then you ought to get cardiology consultation for that.

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The other drug we give is nitroglycerin, and we

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give this drug because it's a vasodilator, and the

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idea is that you vasodilate the coronary arteries,

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making them slightly bigger. That slightly works.

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When you make them slightly bigger,

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then it's much easier to see narrowing.

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It's a theoretical advantage.

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It hasn't really been rigorously tested,

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but everybody attests to its greatness.

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So we give the nitroglycerin one

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tablet sublingually under the tongue

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around the time that you start the scan.

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So, the major thing you need to warn the patient

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about is that they can get a headache from it.

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So that's not a catastrophic side

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effect, but it's a very common one and an annoying one.

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So it's best to warn them about that.

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In terms of contraindication, if they are

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on phosphodiesterase inhibitors, better

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known as Viagra, and its, uh, alternatives.

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And yes, remember, it's not just men with

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erectile dysfunction who are on Viagra.

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People with pulmonary hypertension are often on it.

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So you have to be, you know, you have to be careful.

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Avoiding the, I don't want to stereotype type

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of bias, so ask everybody, are you on this or

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not, and remember there are derivatives of that.

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The problem with phosphodiesterase inhibitors

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is that they work also on the same kind of

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mechanism as the nitrates, except they work on

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a different path, so the two are synergistic.

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It's not the same path, they're

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different paths and they add up.

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So you can get very profound hypertension.

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And if you do get that, you will need to, um, get the

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patient lying down with the legs up and, um, with, uh,

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intravenous saline, but you've got to keep this simple.

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Yeah.

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You're, you know, you're a radiologist, you're not cardiologists.

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172 00:07:48,985 --> 00:07:52,295 So, um, keep these medications are overwhelmingly

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safe in people that don't have contraindication.

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So anytime you have any doubts, avoid them.

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Thank you.

Report

Faculty

Saurabh Jha, MD

Co-Program Director, Cardiothoracic Imaging Fellowship, Associate Professor of Radiology

University of Pennsylvania

Tags

Vascular

Coronary arteries

Cardiac

CTA

CT

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