Response to determining functional significance of subclavian artery stenosis using exercise thallium-201 stress imaging.To the Editor: The functional significance of subclavian artery stenosis is easily gauged by history and physical examination, and I was therefore surprised to see the recommendations in this article for using exercise thallium-201 stress imaging. (1) This is carrying the situation a bit too far. The case report of the lady in this article clearly shows that she had left arm claudication claudication /clau·di·ca·tion/ (klaw?di-ka´shun) limping; lameness. intermittent claudication related to her subclavian subclavian /sub·cla·vi·an/ (sub-kla´ve-an) below the clavicle. Subclavian Located beneath the collarbone (clavicle). lesion. The article even goes on to state that with the use of an ergometer ergometer /er·gom·e·ter/ (er-gom´e-ter) a dynamometer. bicycle ergometer an apparatus for measuring the muscular, metabolic, and respiratory effects of exercise. for exercise for nearly 3 minutes, the patient had left arm pain. The injection of thallium thallium (thăl`ēəm), metallic chemical element; symbol Tl; at. no. 81; at. wt. 204.383; m.p. 303.5°C;; b.p. about 1,457°C;; sp. gr. 11.85 at 20°C;; valence +1 or +3. to confirm the findings, in my view, was expensive and unnecessary. She had an excellent result from left subclavian angioplasty with, as the article states, complete resolution of her symptoms. Therefore, a second follow-up thallium image was again expensive and unnecessary. Vascular surgeons have known for years that a simple history of upper extremity claudication combined with the finding of a subclavian bruit bruit (brwe) (brldbomact) 1. a sound or murmur heard in auscultation, especially an abnormal one. 2. sound (3). in the supraclavicular fossa and a diminished blood pressure in the affected arm are all that is needed to make the diagnosis of clinically significant claudication related to subclavian stenosis. The addition of thallium stress imaging is expensive and totally uncalled for. If I were the patient or her insurance carrier, I would demand a refund for the two unnecessary thallium scans. Also noted is the mislabeling mislabeling, n 1. the inaccurate identification of a product in which the label lists ingredients or components that are not actually included within the product. 2. of the narrative for Figure 1 and Figure 2 in the article. Figure 1 states that this is a coronary angiogram an·gi·o·gram n. An angiographic x-ray of blood vessels used in diagnosing pathological conditions of the cardiovascular system.//An x-ray of one or more blood vessels produced by angiography and used in diagnosing pathology in the cardiovascular showing left subclavian stenosis, and as anyone with vascular experience knows, this is a selective left subclavian angiogram and not a coronary angiogram showing the lesion. On the one hand, this article serves to educate practitioners about subclavian stenosis and the relatively infrequent cerebral or upper extremity symptoms that it causes. However your readers should not take away the idea that symptomatic subclavian stenosis requires a thallium scan to determine clinical significance. History and physical examination is a much simpler and more cost-effective way to determine the significance of a subclavian arterial stenosis. Steve Powell, MD Professor of Surgery Section of Vascular Surgery East Carolina University East Carolina University is a public, coeducational, intensive research university located in Greenville, North Carolina, United States. Named East Carolina University by statue and commonly known as ECU or East Carolina School of Medicine Greenville, NC Reference 1. Wasson S, Bedi S, Singh S. Determining Functional Significance of Subclavian Artery Stenosis Using Exercise Thallium-201 Stress Imaging. South Med J 2005;98:559-560. Letters to the Editor are welcomed. They may report new clinical or laboratory observations and new developments in medical care or may contain comments on recent contents of the Journal. They will be published, if found suitable, as space permits. Like other material submitted for publication, letters must be typewritten type·write intr. & tr.v. type·wrote , type·writ·ten , type·writ·ing, type·writes To engage in writing or to write (matter) with a typewriter. , double-spaced, and must not exceed two typewritten pages in length. No more than five references and one figure or table may be used. See "Information for Authors" for format of references, tables, and figures. Editing, possible abridgment, and acceptance remain the prerogative of the Editors. |
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