Nuclear Medicine Communications

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Nuclear Medicine Communications:
September 2008 - Volume 29 - Issue 9 - pp 764-769
doi: 10.1097/MNM.0b013e3283025085
Original Articles

Early uptake of 99mTc-C2A in the acute phase of myocardial infarction as a prognostic indicator for follow-up cardiac dysfunction

Zhu, Xiaoguang; Migrino, Raymond Q.; Hellman, Robert S.; Brahmbhatt, Tejas; Zhao, Ming

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Abstract

Objective: The C2A domain of Synaptotagmin I is a molecular probe for the specific imaging of cell death. Here we test the hypothesis that the uptake of 99mTc-C2A in the acute phase of an infarction is associated with cardiac dysfunction in follow-ups.

Methods: The left coronary artery was occluded in Sprague-Dawley rats for 0, 10, 20, and 30 min. 99mTc-C2A was injected intravenously at 2 h of reperfusion. Anterior planar images were acquired with one million counts on a γ camera 3 h after injection. 99mTc-C2A uptake was calculated as the total counts in the left ventricle region minus blood pool signal. The in-vivo signal detected was correlated with wall motion score index at 1 and 3 weeks follow-ups measured by echocardiography.

Results: 99mTc-C2A uptake was higher with increased ischemic time (2244±852, 4054±1223, and 6178±1451 for 10, 20, and 30 min ischemia, analysis of variance P<0.001). A significant correlation was found between 99mTc-C2A uptake and wall motion score index at 1 week (R=0.800, P=0.0006) and 3 weeks (R=0.810, P=0.0008).

Conclusion: In this ischemia/reperfusion model, 99mTc-C2A uptake in the acute phase was associated with functional abnormality at 1 and 3 weeks. This demonstrates the potential diagnostic and prognostic value of 99mTc-C2A as a novel imaging agent.

© 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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