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This is a free website for Nuclear Medicine Technologists and Students who wish to broaden their understanding of Nuclear Cardiology Practices and Principles. |
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LESSON 2bDEXTROCARDIA AND DEXTROVERSIONDextrocardia and Dextroversion describe a congenital condition whereby the heart is positioned in the right half of the torso. There are three conditions characterized by dextrocardia, or right-lying heart. The most common and familiar is mirror-image dextrocardia, in which the anterior-posterior relationships are normal but their right-to-left orientation is reversed. It is usually easily recognized as it is associated with some degree of abdominal situs inversus, a rare congenital condition in which the heart and major organs are transposed. The primitive loop in the embryo moves into the reverse direction of its normal position during fetal development. Approximately % 0.01 of infants are born with this disorder, and it affects males and females in equal numbers.
DEXTROCARDIA AND SPECT IMAGINGA word of caution: although it is currently possible to acquire data in the patient with dextrocardia, there are some imaging systems that may not allow the user to process the data. Prior to scheduling a patient with dextrocardia for nuclear SPECT, be certain that your camera manufacturer's software allows the user to manipulate the processed data for interpretation. Multipurpose single and dual head system software should offer a variety of image manipulation options (Philips-Adac Vertex, V60, Cirrus, and the like). Obtaining an ECT of a patient with known Dextroversion requires a few changes to the imaging setup. Since the heart is in the right side of the chest, you must image from LAO to RPO. It is simple to adjust your protocol to correctly acquire and process the data in this population of patients. Lie the patient on the imaging table with his/her head at the foot end of the table, both arms up. Set up your SPECT acquisition in the computer, but edit the protocol by changing the orientation from 0 to 180 degrees. Leave the starting angle as is and scan as usual. SPECT PROCESSING(Philips ADAC autoSPECT + InStill 5.0) Processing a myocardial SPECT requires inversion of the reconstructed transverse slices. To do this, you must begin processing as usual, save the transverse, then go into your image manipulation under the ‘dynamic’ menu options. Then,
Label the inverted transverse slices then use these to reorient your slices for the non-attenuation corrected data and the attenuation corrected data. (Specific instructions should be in your protocol manual). NOTE: The Processed GSP cannot be reoriented in the system, so any wall motion cines displayed in Autoquant will appear to be backwards, just as the raw data was acquired. |