Interactive Transcript
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Okay, so, um, this next case is a 70 something old patient
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and unique in that they live in a remote site
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where we have a coronary CT program,
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no cath lab, no nuclear lab.
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And so they were thought to have intermediate to high risk
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for coronary disease and this was the first test selected.
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So right off the bat we can at least give a kind
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of a general risk category.
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So they now have, are known to have atherosclerosis.
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So yield is high already.
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Um, but we want to go of course further.
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And uh, the first thing I notice when I look at the RCA,
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there's also a touch of motion on this case.
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So it's worth a discussion.
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Very subtle slab artifact here,
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but you don't wanna get tripped up by these kind of slabs.
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And this one's well above the coronaries.
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In fact, you could argue that that was an unnecessary slab.
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But this one here, it's a subtle breathing
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and there's two ways you can get around that.
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One would be to, um, be very careful
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or the second would be to re-scan.
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And that's what we did. Uh,
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because it's a remote site, we just have the ability
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for the technologist to check in with us,
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still breathe on the second one.
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So we know there's gonna be a difficult road ahead,
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but, uh, we wanna do the best for these patients.
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And this kind of slabs probably not gonna trip you up.
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In fact, I can just look at my sagittal here and say this.
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RCA is small, but it is co-dominant.
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So a nice look here, there's a, it gives rise to A PDA
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that's on the right side of the middle cardiac vein.
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And the circumflex here gives rise to the
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PLV, the posterior left ventricular branch.
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So PLVB.
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So we will focus on the left and left main has some plaque.
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You can see it on this view.
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I'll check it again on this view.
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So plaque but not significant stenosis.
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And then here the ostomy of the LED has kind
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of a little bit of a stenosis.
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There's some calcium
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and uh, I think that'll end up coming out at least moderate.
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I'm gonna turn on it and kind of try to lay that vessel out,
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which is what we always wanna do.
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So we get our best investigation.
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Uh, somebody asked me once from an emergency radiologist
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society, what if we just do, uh, axials?
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'cause we really need that for throughput.
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You will get burned, you'll miss things.
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It's in all the guidelines you have to do npr.
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So not in this day and age,
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but never really the CT is for coronaries,
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always needs a workstation.
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So I totally get that.
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It's an extra step, but it's, you would miss things.
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This is actually to me at least moderate.
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There's some calcium so it might be blooming.
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And then, um, a second lesion there doesn't look as bad.
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Lot of circ disease, but no, uh, significant.
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So what do you do now? This patient's remote.
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Uh, I see a slab, but I don't think
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that's gonna be affecting much.
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I saw the, my worst osis is this moderate LAD.
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Uh, let's see what the official reader said.
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They said moderate
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and they thought it was approximately
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a mid kind of agree there.
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Um, so well you can send
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These off to the, uh, analysis
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and that's pretty reasonable before you move the patient
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and looks pretty positive to me the threshold is 0.75
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and this is very clearly below that
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exactly where we worried.
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Um, RCA is too small to analyze, but we weren't worried.
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Circ is co-dominant. That's fine.
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So we now have a really targeted question, okay,
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to move the patient from their remote location
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where they live and uh, try to get to a catheterization.
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And here's that cath.
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So this is the left circumflex giving rise
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to a co-dominant supplying the inferior wall.
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I think that's the area we wanna look not
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as impressive by cath.
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A couple things about cath too.
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If you're gonna go after something, you have
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to have a lesion to look for.
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So you might say, I need to have a, uh, I-F-R-D-F-R
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or whatever the alphabet soup is without a wire
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placement across a lesion.
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They don't know what they're investigating.
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So in this one
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I can see they didn't go any further other than just some
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careful looks, but that's the only thing I could maybe see
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and it just doesn't pass the sniff test.
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So pretty reasonable to just stop there.
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And, uh, the invasive angiography said they thought it was
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about 30% in those areas
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and they decided to medically manage
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and just carefully treat.
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So pretty reasonable.
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I think it's a, uh, good use of each of these tests here.
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And the FFR is tuned to be a little oversensitive, uh,
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which is what you kind of want just a little bit more
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sensitive than in fr this patient's not a super high risk
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calcium score was 400 and some.
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So a good, uh, example of careful use still ends up with,
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uh, smile discrepancies
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and we're kind of set to be more sensitive than specific.