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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 44 No. 10 1625-1632
© 2003 by Society of Nuclear Medicine


Clinical Investigations

Preliminary Evaluation of a Fuzzy Logic-Based Automatic Quantitative Analysis in Myocardial SPECT

Florent Cachin, MD1, Janusz Lipiecki, MD2, Danièle Mestas, MD1, Aimé Amonchot, MD2, Benjamin Geissler, MD1, Cyril Thouly, PhD1, Jean Ponsonnaille, MD2 and Jean Maublant, MD, PhD1

1 Division of Nuclear Medicine, Jean Perrin Cancer Center, Clermont-Ferrand, France
2 Department of Cardiology, Gabriel Montpied University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand, France

This study validates a new quantitative myocardial perfusion SPECT software. Methods: The processing starts with the extraction of the morphologic skeleton of the left ventricular myocardium from reconstructed transverse sections. Fuzzy logic is used to decide whether a pixel belongs to the myocardium and any perfusion defect is filled according to a truncated bullet model. The resulting image is partitioned in 18 isovolumetric sectors. Sex-matched normal limits, criteria of abnormality for rest 201Tl and 99mTc-labeled perfusion tracers, reproducibility studies, and detection of coronary artery disease were developed and validated in an overall population of 343 patients. The sex- and tracer-matched means and SDs of a normal response were calculated in 93 male and 93 female patients with a <5% likelihood of coronary artery disease. Reproducibility measurements and assignment of different sectors of the myocardium to a specific coronary were performed from data collected in 49 and 60 patients, respectively. The accuracy of the detection of a coronary artery occlusion was assessed in 48 patients who also underwent coronary angiography. Results: The intra- and interoperator reproducibility of the sectorial activity was high with a linear regression coefficient of 0.97 and a SD of the difference measurement at 4.4% and 3.8%, respectively. Overall sensitivity and specificity for the detection of occluded coronary artery were 90% and 80%, respectively. For the detection of left anterior descending, left circumflex, and right artery coronary occlusion, sensitivity was 92%, 75%, and 92.5%, respectively, and specificity was 75%, 78%, and 90%, respectively. Conclusion: The new quantitative myocardial perfusion SPECT software appears to be a very helpful program for the objective analysis of perfusion tracer distribution in myocardial SPECT and a very accurate tool in the detection and localization of coronary artery occlusion.

Key Words: myocardial perfusion imaging • quantification • reproducibility • coronary artery disease




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C. Katoh, K. Morita, T. Shiga, N. Kubo, K. Nakada, and N. Tamaki
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J. Nucl. Med., November 1, 2004; 45(11): 1908 - 1916.
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