Selects appropriate cardiac imaging modality based on clinical question and pretest probability. Use when choosing cardiac imaging, selecting stress testing modality, or ordering cardiac CT/MRI.
Selects appropriate cardiac imaging modality based on clinical question and pretest probability.
Cardiac imaging is the highest-volume diagnostic category in cardiology, yet inappropriate utilization remains a persistent problem. The ACC Appropriate Use Criteria (AUC) define when specific imaging modalities add clinical value vs. when they provide no incremental benefit or unnecessary radiation exposure. Choosing the wrong modality — ordering a nuclear stress test when a treadmill ECG would suffice, or missing a CMR when viability assessment is needed — leads to wasted resources, patient harm from unnecessary radiation, and delayed diagnoses.
The 2021 ACC/AHA Chest Pain Guideline introduced a framework for selecting between exercise ECG, stress echo, SPECT, PET, CCTA, and CMR based on pretest probability, patient characteristics, and the specific clinical question. This skill ensures every imaging order is justified, appropriate, and targeted to the clinical decision it must inform.
Common Clinical Questions and Appropriate Modality:
| Clinical Question | First-Line Modality | Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Stable chest pain, intermediate pretest probability, can exercise, interpretable ECG | Exercise ECG (treadmill) | CCTA |
| Stable chest pain, cannot exercise | Pharmacologic stress with imaging (SPECT, PET, echo, CMR) | CCTA |
| Stable chest pain, uninterpretable ECG | Stress imaging (stress echo, SPECT, PET) | CCTA |
| Acute chest pain, low-risk, troponin negative | CCTA (fast rule-out) | Stress testing |
| Known CAD — functional significance of lesion | Stress imaging (SPECT, PET, stress echo) | FFR at cath |
| New-onset HF — ischemic vs. non-ischemic | CMR (scar/viability) or CCTA (coronary anatomy) | Stress imaging |
| Viability assessment before revascularization | CMR (gold standard) or PET | Dobutamine echo |
| Pericardial disease evaluation | CMR | Echo, CT |
| Cardiac mass evaluation | CMR | CT, echo |
| Pre-TAVR/structural planning | Cardiac CT (gated) | TEE |
| Aortic disease (aneurysm, dissection) | CTA aorta | CMR, TEE |
Exercise ECG (Treadmill):
Stress Echocardiography:
SPECT Myocardial Perfusion Imaging:
PET Myocardial Perfusion:
Coronary CT Angiography (CCTA):
Cardiac MRI (CMR):
AUC Rating Categories:
Common Rarely Appropriate Scenarios (avoid ordering):
Radiation Dose Comparison:
| Modality | Typical Effective Dose (mSv) |
|---|---|
| Chest X-ray | 0.02 |
| Coronary calcium score | 1–3 |
| CCTA (modern) | 1–5 |
| SPECT (Tc-99m) | 8–12 |
| SPECT (Tl-201) | 15–20 |
| PET (Rb-82) | 2–4 |
| Cardiac cath (diagnostic) | 5–10 |
| CMR | 0 (no ionizing radiation) |
ALARA Principle: Use the lowest radiation modality that answers the clinical question. PET preferred over SPECT when available. CCTA with dose-reduction protocols preferred over older high-dose techniques.
Contrast Agent Safety:
Structured Report Requirements:
When Results Are Discordant with Clinical Suspicion: