Current status of nuclear cardiology practice in Latin America and the Caribbean

被引:8
|
作者
Paez, Diana [1 ]
Peix, Amalia [2 ]
Orellana, Pilar [3 ]
Vitola, Joao [4 ]
Mut, Fernando [5 ]
Gutierrez, Claudia [6 ]
Plaza, Crosby [1 ]
Becic, Tarik [1 ]
Dondi, Maurizio [1 ]
Estrada, Enrique [1 ]
机构
[1] IAEA, Div Human Hlth, Nucl Med & Diagnost Imaging Sect, Vienna, Austria
[2] Inst Cardiol, Dept Nucl Med, 17 702 Vedado, Havana 10400, Cuba
[3] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Radiol, Nucl Med Unit, Santiago, Chile
[4] Quanta Diagnost & Terapia, Curitiba, Parana, Brazil
[5] Asociac Espanola, Nucl Med Serv, Montevideo, Uruguay
[6] Fdn Cardioinfantil, Cardiol Inst, Bogota, Colombia
关键词
Nuclear cardiology; cardiovascular diseases; SPECT; PET; Latin America; Caribbean; DEVELOPING-WORLD; MEDICINE PRACTICE; IAEA;
D O I
10.1007/s12350-016-0650-9
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
The burden of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) in theworld is ever growing. They represent the first cause of death worldwide and in Latin America. Nuclear cardiology has a well-established role in the management of patient with CVDs and is being increasingly integrated into the healthcare systems in the region. However, there remains variability as to the infrastructure available across the countries, in terms of existing technology, radiopharmaceuticals, andhumanresources. Theapproximatenumberof gamma (c) cameras in the region is 1348, with an average of 2.25 per million population; Argentina and Brazil having the largest number. Nearly 80% of the existing cameras are single-photon emission tomography (SPECT), of which 8% are hybrid SPECT-CT systems. Positron emission tomography technology is steadily increasing, and currently, there is an average of 0.25 scanners permillion inhabitants, indicating that there is a potential to expand the capacities in order to cover the needs. Four countries have nuclear reactors for research purposes, which allow the production of technetium-99 m (Argentina, Chile, Mexico andPeru), while four (Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, and Mexico) assemble Mo-99-(99m)Tcgenerators. As for the nuclear cardiology studies, about 80% of studies performed are gated SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging; less than 10% are multi-gated acquisition (mainly for evaluation of cardiac toxicity in cancer patients), and the other 10% correspond to other types of studies, such as viability detection, and adrenergic innervation studies with 123 I-MIBG. Physical stress is preferred, when possible, based on the clinical condition of the patient. Regarding human resources, there is an average of 1.1 physicians and 1.3 technologists per c camera, with 0.1 medical physicists and 0.1 radiopharmacists per center in the region. The future of nuclear cardiology in Latin America and the Caribbean is encouraging, with greatpotential and possibilities for growth. National, regional, and international cooperation including support from scientific societies and organizations such as International Atomic Energy Agency, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, and Latin American Association of Biology and Nuclear Medicine Societies, as well as governmental commitment are key factors for the development of the specialty. A multimodality approach in cardiac imaging will contribute to a better management of patients with CVDs.
引用
收藏
页码:308 / 316
页数:9
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