Interactive Transcript
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Indications for coronary CT.
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So, um, firstly, I'm talking about
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coronary CT, not cardiac as a whole genre.
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So this is a subset of cardiac CT.
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It's important because it's a controversial topic.
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And it's also important because
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it's an expanding topic.
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I, amongst many others, believe that this is
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something that should be, and most likely will
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be, in the province of the general radiologist,
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just like a PE study, just like a, um, dissection
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study, uh, appendicitis study, which is very common.
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And the reason it's very common is
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because of the first indication.
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The first indication is low
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risk acute coronary syndrome.
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So what do I mean by that?
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I mean patients who come to the emergency
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department with a very low chance of actually
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having something wrong with their coronary
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artery as a cause of their chest pain.
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Thank you.
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Remember, we're not doing this to find MI,
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so it's not as if, oh, so the patient has
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elevated troponins and abnormal ECG, like ST
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elevation, and let's find out if the patient
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has a blockage before we take them to the cath lab.
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That's not why we're doing this at all.
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And if that's the indication,
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then that's a wrong indication.
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So in those with a high pretest
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probability, we're not doing this.
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We're doing this in those with a low, very
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low pretest probability in order to tell them
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whether the patient has coronary narrowing that
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could be so much that it may be responsible for
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the patient's chest pain, that they may have
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an acute coronary syndrome, maybe unstable
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angina, therefore they may need to be admitted.
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Uh, the test is more powerful when it's negative than
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when it's positive, because when it's negative you're
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giving them a kind of a warranty, okay, it's not that.
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When it's positive, it may still not be that.
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But low risk acute coronary syndrome, and
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we'll talk more about variations of the theme
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on that, but that's essentially the most
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important indication for radiologists to
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get involved with in the ED.
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The second indication is
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an emerging indication, which is stable
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coronary artery disease, stable CAD.
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So these are people that don't just suddenly wake
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up one morning saying, "Oh no, I have chest pain."
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They've developed chest pain
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over a long period of time.
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They may be on medication for it.
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Now the question is, do they need to go to
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the cath lab to see if they have narrowing
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that needs a stent or needs a bypass.
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In the past, and even now, the tests used for those
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patients were functional tests such as an exercise
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ECG, nuclear medicine test, or a stress echo, and what
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you look at in those tests is whether, when you stress the
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heart, there is a wall motion abnormality
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or an ECG abnormality or a perfusion defect.
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Um, what we're doing with the
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coronary CTA is quite the opposite.
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What we're saying is, is there narrowing
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enough for there to be a problem with the
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patient's coronary artery that could potentially
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benefit from a stent or from a bypass?
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It's controversial, not because
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narrowings don't exist.
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It's controversial because you may not
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need to stent them or bypass them; you
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might just need to give them medication.
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In which case, well, what's the point of actually
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finding out whether they have narrowing or not?
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But we can leave the controversies aside and
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understand that that is a major indication
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for stable coronary artery disease.
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There are three others, which are sort of related.
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One is a preoperative assessment.
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So people that go for aortic
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stenosis, mitral valve repair,
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and other heart diseases, cardiologists have
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traditionally wanted to clear the coronary arteries
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because these are very stressful procedures.
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And if there is anything brewing one may
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not have known about, then the stress of the
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procedure can cause a heart attack or a stroke.
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So it's important to get an idea if there is
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something that needs to be done concurrently.
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So preoperative assessment of the coronary
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arteries, uh, used to be done with a cath,
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but now you can do this quite easily.
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So that's a big indication.
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The other indication is heart failure.
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Somebody who comes in, who's
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young, comes in with heart failure.
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Um, they could have heart failure from
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abnormalities of their coronary arteries, or they
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could have it from other causes, non-ischemic.
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So coronary CTA is a good way of
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actually excluding coronary artery
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abnormality.
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If the coronary arteries are clean, then it's
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unlikely that it's from coronary artery disease,
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and then they should pursue non-ischemic causes.
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And finally, anomalous coronary arteries, so coronary
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arteries that come off the wrong place, and I'll
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show a couple of examples of that in the course.
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These patients generally present with chest pain,
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or they may even have syncope, and it's part of
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the workup to rule out structural heart disease
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predisposes the patient to sudden cardiac death
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and anomalous coronary artery is one of those.
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