Scientists develop new technique that could improve heart attack prediction

Building on work pioneered in Cambridge 10 years ago, scientists have developed a new imaging approach that could help improve how doctors predict a patient’s risk of having a heart attack.

Our results show, for the first time, that certain areas of atherosclerosis within the coronary arteries, previously thought to be inert, are actually highly active and have the potential to cause heart attack. Once identified, they might be targeted with drug therapy more effectively.
Dr James Rudd, HEFCE Senior Lecturer at the Department of Medicine

The British Heart Foundation (BHF) funded project, a collaboration between scientists from the Universities of Cambridge and Edinburgh, is the first to demonstrate the potential of combined PET and CT imaging to highlight the disease processes causing heart attacks directly within the coronary arteries.

The research, published last week in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), involved imaging over 100 people with a CT calcium scan to measure the amount of calcified or hardened plaques in their coronary arteries. This is a standard test, which is commonly used to predict heart attack risk but cannot distinguish calcium that has been there for some time from calcium that is actively building up.

Image:   From left to right, CT, PET and combined PET/CT images of the heart arteries. The areas in white on the left and right panels demonstrate calcification of the arteries, whilst the orange spots on the middle and right panels demonstrate actively calcifying areas of atherosclerosis. These have accumulated significant amounts of NaF, and we believe that these areas represent high-risk areas for future heart attacks. Further work is, of course, needed to prove this hypothesis. 

Image courtesy of: James Rudd

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Reproduced courtesy of the University of Cambridge
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