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What’s all the hype behind 64-slice scanners?
64-slice CT scanners featured on Oprah! Just what does this
mean? Do these new devices provide any advantages in your heart
disease prevention program?
The October 19th, 2005 episode of the popular Oprah Winfrey
daytime talk show featured an hour-long conversation about the
new 64-slice CT scanners. Oprah’s guest, thoracic surgeon Dr. Mehmet Oz, gushed, "If you think about it, the CAT scan takes a
picture. If it's your gallbladder, it just sits there and waits
for the photo shoot. But to really capture what is happening
with a heart, you need a scanner that can take pictures so fast
it can catch the heart in a beat. These new scanners can take
almost 200 pictures a second so they can get your heart at so
many different angles that you capture it. What makes this
technology so cool, is you can actually go beyond calcium which
is just a symptom."
Is this true? What’s the advantage of such rapid imaging? Is
calcium just a “symptom” but not the disease itself? Should we
all run out and get a 64-slice scan? Dr. Oz was unclear on this
issue when asked who should consider such a scan. He stated
that if you are willing to make changes in your life, then you
might consider one.
What’s the real story?
We are thrilled that the concept of CT heart scanning is
gaining a broad audience. If it makes it to Oprah, it’s not so
much groundbreaking as mainstream. Oprah, after all, is hardly
a forum for scientific discourse. But it is a powerful
mainstream media outlet.
So what’s the real story with the 64-slice scanners?
Our view: the 64-slice scanners are the latest and
greatest version of the multi-slice scanners first introduced
around a decade ago. The earliest versions of these devices
were called spiral or helical scanners because the x-ray
detector needed to rotate around the body part being scanned to
generate a 360-degree image. The problem was that it required
time to revolve around the body, usually a second or two. This
simply was not fast enough to image a moving object like the
heart. The heart moves several times through several phases of
motion in that one or two seconds of time.
Design engineers therefore provided a solution by building
scanners with more than one x-ray detector in these devices:
initially 2, 4, 8, 16, and now 64-detectors. This allows faster
imaging with less radiation (though still not negligible; see
below). There’s no argument that these devices represent an
improvement over its predecessors like the 16-slice devices.
Preliminary studies suggest that angiograms using x-ray dye do
indeed provide detailed images of the coronary arteries.
Does this detailed imaging potential mean we should throw away
plain old heart scans and all get 64-slice coronary angiograms?
After all, Dr. Oz says if you’re interested in changing your
lifestyle, you should consider having one.
Well, consider:
- First and foremost, angiography, regardless of how it is
performed, merely determines if a blockage is present.
Unfortunately, 90% of all heart attacks are the result of
plaque ruptures at sites that have minor blockage.
Calcium scoring detects these silent killers.
- The coronary calcium scan is quantitative. In other words,
you get a specific and precise score that tells just how much
plaque your have. Recall that, although calcium is being
measured, calcium is simply a means to measure total plaque
since it consistently occupies 20% of plaque volume. A coronary
angiogram, regardless of which device is used to generate it,
is non-quantitative. The best you could do is say that there’s
a 40% blockage at one site along an artery. This is not a full
longitudinal quantification of plaque.
- Most people do not need screening angiography that requires
x-ray dye and a substantial quantity of radiation, even with
the 64-slice devices. Estimates vary, but you’re exposed to
more radiation than a conventional heart catheterization by
going through a 64-slice angiogram (the same as about 40 or
more chest x-rays!). Yes, it’s a wonderful technique, but
angiography is not suited to be a screening test. Heart
scanning to obtain a heart scan score also subjects us to
radiation, but a relatively modest quantity suitable for a
screening test. <
- Many centers acquiring 64-slice devices are hospitals.
Hospitals as a general rule are not interested in prevention.
They are interested in generating more heart procedures like
bypass surgery. Shockingly, even though the 64-slice scanners
are able to obtain heart scan scores, many of these centers
don’t really care about coronary calcium scoring. They only
want the angiograms, since these often lead to costly
procedures. Don’t count on helpful counseling after your scan
if it comes from a hospital.
64-slice scanners can provide calcium scores just like any
other scanner. But that capability seems to have been forgotten
in the excitement over improved angiographic imaging.
In all practicality, the 64-slice scanners provide reliable
calcium scoring just like any other scanner, both multi-slice
and EBT. Angiographic capability is indeed enhanced, but this
should not prompt you to get a coronary angiogram. It’s simply
not necessary in most cases.
Many scan centers have been able to perform confident
non-invasive coronary angiograms in patients for several years
on the EBT and 16-slice multi-slice devices. When are such
studies truly indicated? Most cardiologists familiar with the
technique would agree that they can be useful when:
- A stress test (e.g., stress thallium or equivalent) is
equivocal—a common situation. In other words, the stress test
shows a questionable, though potentially important,
abnormality.
- Symptoms are unusual (e.g., shoulder or abdominal pain)
• Follow-up of persons with prior procedures, e.g., bypass
surgery, and perhaps stents (though stent imaging is still a
difficult hurdle due to the steel)
- Congenital anomalies are suspected—CT angiography, in fact,
is great for this question
The “virtual” images provided by CT coronary angiography,
are a tremendous innovation and offer a non-invasive method of
detecting blockages. Unfortunately, the majority of heart
attacks occur at sites with little or no blockage and calcium
scoring remains the best method of detecting this risk.
CT or "virtual" angiograms also suffer from many of the same
limitations as virtual colonoscopies. If a polyp is imaged that
needs to be removed, a real colonoscopy needs to be performed.
Likewise, if a severe blockage is revealed in the coronaries, a
real angiogram and perhaps angioplasty/stent, etc. may need to
be performed.
Copyright 2005, Track Your Plaque.
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