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Intravenous coronary angiography with synchrotron radiation is a novel and minimally invasive technique for coronary imaging. At the Hamburger Synchrotronstrahlungslabor HASYLAB at DESY, a dedicated angiography system has been developed, which has been shown to provide detailed images of coronary artery segments. For each scan, two monochromatic X-ray images below and above the K-edge of iodine were recorded simultaneously. The two images were subtracted logarithmically to produce a maximal contrast enhancement of the iodine. To date, the procedure has been carried out on 379 outpatients. No complications occurred during or after the angiographic procedure, and hospitalization was not required in any subject. The acceptance by patient is extremely high. Five outside reviewers, blinded as to the clinical data or prior angiographic interpretation, reviewed the images for the presence or absence of 70% or more occlusion of a vessel. They reached a sensitivity of 79% and a specificity of 99%. The study has demonstrated that the synchrotron method has satisfactory sensitivity and very high specificity for severe stenoses. The new method has several advantages over magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), electron beam computed tomography (EBCT), and multi-slice computed tomography (MSCT). Neither vascular calcification (CT) nor the presence of metal stents (MRI) impairs the evaluation of perfusion of segments of the coronary arteries. Furthermore, the spatial resolution is three or four times higher using synchrotron angiography, and problems due to respiratory motion are eliminated.

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