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Abstract
Left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) was measured in 25 patients, aged 2 weeks to 20 years (mean 8.6 years), using a portable nonimaging scintillation stethoscope. Technically satisfactory studies were obtained in 23 patients. LVEF was validated by cineangiography in 19 patients and by standard gated blood pool scintigraphy in 4. EF measured by the nuclear stethoscope correlated well with values obtained by cineangiography or scintigraphy (r = 0.869, p less than 0.001) over a wide range of EF values (18 to 79%). In children younger than 5 years (n = 11), the correlation (r = 0.728, p less than 0.02) was less satisfactory than in those older than 5 years (r = 0.926; p less than 0.001). Although modifications in the instrument and further clinical trials with the stethoscope are needed before the device becomes clinically useful to pediatric cardiologists, our data indicate that the nuclear stethoscope can provide reliable assessment of LVEF in pediatric patients.
View details for Web of Science ID A1984RX73900040
View details for PubMedID 6318544