Research ArticleHuman Studies
Effects of Modified Pharmacologic Stress Approaches on Hyperemic Myocardial Blood Flow
Johannes Czernin, Martin Auerbach, Karl T. Sun, Michael Phelps and Heinrich R. Schelbert
Journal of Nuclear Medicine April 1995, 36 (4) 575-580;
Johannes Czernin
Martin Auerbach
Karl T. Sun
Michael Phelps
This is a PDF-only article. The first page of the PDF of this article appears above.
In this issue
Effects of Modified Pharmacologic Stress Approaches on Hyperemic Myocardial Blood Flow
Johannes Czernin, Martin Auerbach, Karl T. Sun, Michael Phelps, Heinrich R. Schelbert
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Apr 1995, 36 (4) 575-580;
Jump to section
Related Articles
- No related articles found.
Cited By...
- Clinical Quantification of Myocardial Blood Flow Using PET: Joint Position Paper of the SNMMI Cardiovascular Council and the ASNC
- Myocardial Perfusion During Long-Term Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibition or {beta}-Blockade in Patients With Essential Hypertension
- Effect of Caffeine Intake on Myocardial Hyperemic Flow Induced by Adenosine Triphosphate and Dipyridamole
- Peripheral Flow Response to Transient Arterial Forearm Occlusion Does Not Reflect Myocardial Perfusion Reserve
- Absolute quantitation of coronary steal induced by intravenous dipyridamole
- Impaired Myocardial Vasodilation During Hyperemic Stress With Dipyridamole in Hypertriglyceridemia
- Altered Myocardial Vasodilatation in Patients With Hypertriglyceridemia in Anatomically Normal Coronary Arteries
- Homogeneously Reduced Versus Regionally Impaired Myocardial Blood Flow in Hypertensive Patients: Two Different Patterns of Myocardial Perfusion Associated With Degree of Hypertrophy
- Correlation Between Hemodynamic Changes and Tomographic Sestamibi Imaging During Dipyridamole-Induced Coronary Hyperemia
- Reduced Myocardial Flow Reserve in Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus