Cardiac CT Imaging
Matthew J. Budoff and Allen J. Taylor
20
Scientifi c Statement on Cardiac CT – 2006
Coronary calcium scanning
Summary from the AHA Scientifi c Statement
Coronary calcium scanning
Additional statements/guidelines related to coronary
artery calcium
ACC/AHA Expert Consensus Document on coronary
calcium
Comparison with European Guidelines
Cardiac CT Angiography – Scientifi c Statement 2006
Hybrid imaging with CT and nuclear imaging
Recommendations
CT angiography
Hybrid scanning (nuclear and CT)
Ongoing trials
Future directions
Tracking progression of subclinical atherosclerosis
Conclusions
2008 Statement on noninvasive coronary artery
imaging: MR angiography and multi-detector CT
angiography
Specifi c recommendations for use of CTA and MRA
ACCF/AHA 2007 clinical competence statement on
vascular imaging with computed tomography and
magnetic resonance
CT angiography
Specifi c applications
Magnetic resonance angiography
Scientifi c Statement on Cardiac
CT – 2006 [1]
During the past decade, there has been a progressive
increase in the clinical use of cardiac computed
tomography scanning to identify and quantify the
amount of coronary artery calcifi ed plaque (CACP),
leading to both much interest and scrutiny. On the
basis of the substantial validation data, electron beam
computed tomography (EBCT) remains the refer-
ence standard for CACP measurement. The technol-
ogy of cardiac computed tomography has undergone
rapid transformation in recent years such that new
scanners with sub-second image acquisition multi-
row capability have been studied and now multi-
detector computed tomography (MDCT) is suggested
as an alternative approach to EBCT to detect coro-
nary calcifi cation which may broaden the availability
of CACP detection as a consequence of the greater
availability of such scanners. Thus, although coronary
calcifi cation can be quantifi ed and calcium scores can
be related to extent and severity of atherosclerotic
disease and its prognosis, misuse or abuse of these
methods as a broad-based “screening” tool has created
considerable controversy.
This statement reviews the scientifi c data for
cardiac computed tomography (CT) related to
imaging of coronary artery disease and atheroscle-
rosis. Cardiac CT is a computed tomographic
imaging technique that accounts for cardiac motion,
typically through the use of ECG gating. The utility
and limitations of generations of cardiac CT systems
are reviewed in this statement with emphasis on CT
measurement of coronary artery disease and coro-
nary artery calcifi ed plaque (CACP) and noncalci-
fi ed plaque (CANCP).
The committee directing the generation of this
document was composed of representatives of
the AHA, Society of Atherosclerosis Imaging and
Prevention (SAI-P) and Society of Cardio-
vascular Computed Tomography. The document
was reviewed by individuals nominated by these
organizations. This statement updates the 2000 sci-
entifi c statement on Electron Beam Computed
The AHA Guidelines and Scientific Statements Handbook
Edited by Valentin Fuster © 2009 American Heart Association
ISBN: 978-1-405-18463-2