Literature DB >> 18208827

Advances in clinical applications of cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging.

W P Bandettini1, A E Arai.   

Abstract

Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is an evolving technology with growing indications within the clinical cardiology setting. This review article summarises the current clinical applications of CMR. The focus is on the use of CMR in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease with summaries of validation literature in CMR viability, myocardial perfusion, and dobutamine CMR. Practical uses of CMR in non-coronary diseases are also discussed.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18208827      PMCID: PMC2582334          DOI: 10.1136/hrt.2007.119016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Heart        ISSN: 1355-6037            Impact factor:   5.994


Box 1 Appropriate indications for the use of CMR142*

Detection of CAD: Symptomatic—evaluation of chest pain syndrome (use of vasodilator perfusion CMR or dobutamine stress function CMR) Intermediate pre-test probability of CAD ECG uninterpretable OR unable to exercise Detection of CAD: Symptomatic—evaluation of intracardiac structures (use of MR coronary angiography) Evaluation of suspected coronary anomalies Risk assessment with prior test results (use of vasodilator perfusion CMR or dobutamine stress function CMR) Coronary angiography (catheterisation or CT) Stenosis of unclear significance Structure and Function—evaluation of ventricular and valvular function Procedures may include LV/RV mass and volumes, MR angiography, quantification of valvular disease, and delayed contrast enhancement Assessment of complex congenital heart disease including anomalies of coronary circulation, great vessels, and cardiac chambers and valves Procedures may include LV/RV mass and volumes, MR angiography, quantification of valvular disease, and contrast enhancement Evaluation of LV function following myocardial infarction OR in heart failure patients Patients with technically limited images from echocardiogram Quantification of LV function Discordant information that is clinically significant from prior tests Evaluation of specific cardiomyopathies (infiltrative (amyloid, sarcoid), HCM, or due to cardiotoxic therapies) Use of delayed enhancement Characterisation of native and prosthetic cardiac valves—including planimetry of stenotic disease and quantification of regurgitant disease Patients with technically limited images from echocardiogram or TEE Evaluation for arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) Patients presenting with syncope or ventricular arrhythmia Evaluation of myocarditis or myocardial infarction with normal coronary arteries Positive cardiac enzymes without obstructive atherosclerosis on angiography Structure and Function—evaluation of intracardiac and extracardiac structures Evaluation of cardiac mass (suspected tumour or thrombus) Use of contrast for perfusion and enhancement Evaluation of pericardial conditions (pericardial mass, constrictive pericarditis) Evaluation for aortic dissection Evaluation of pulmonary veins prior to radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation Left atrial and pulmonary venous anatomy including dimensions of veins for mapping purposes Detection of myocardial scar and viability—evaluation of myocardial scar (use of late gadolinium enhancement) To determine the location and extent of myocardial necrosis including “no reflow” regions Post acute myocardial infarction To determine viability prior to revascularisation Establish likelihood of recovery of function with revascularisation (PCI or CABG) or medical therapy To determine viability prior to revascularisation Viability assessment by SPECT or dobutamine echo has provided “equivocal or indeterminate” results *adapted from ACCF/ACR/SCCT/SCMR/ASNC/NASCI/SCAI/SIR 2006 appropriateness criteria for cardiac computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:1475–97. The purpose of this review is to illustrate that cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has developed into a powerful non-invasive diagnostic tool that can routinely image myocardial anatomy, function, perfusion, and viability without need for ionising radiation.

BASIC HARDWARE

Fundamentally, CMR uses a magnet 30 000 to 60 000 times the strength of the Earth’s magnetic field to detect the location and physical properties of protons in the body. CMR requires fast gradients, phased-array coils, cardiac gating, and cardiovascular software. Higher magnet field strength (3T vs 1.5T) improves signal-to-noise but exacerbates problems related to field inhomogeneity and specific absorption of radiation, factors leading to artifacts and patient heating respectively. The gradients encode many aspects of the image including position in the body, velocity of blood, and other parameters. Phased-array coils act as antennae to receive the tiny MRI-related radiofrequency signals emanating from the body. Phased-array coils enable image acquisition acceleration with parallel imaging methods.1–3 Stress testing requires MRI-compatible intravenous pumps, contrast injectors, patient monitoring equipment, resuscitation equipment, and audiovisual equipment to communicate with the patient. The clinical team must be prepared to quickly remove a patient from the scanner and treat cardiovascular emergencies.

CONTRAINDICATIONS

The magnetic fields, gradients, and radiofrequency pulses used in MRI pose risks to patients and staff, requiring meticulous safety procedures. Ferromagnetic materials should not be taken into the scanner room. Neurovascular clips, pacemakers, automatic implantable defibrillators, cochlear implants, metal in the eye, retained shrapnel, and neurostimulators are contraindications to MRI although certain models may be safe. With CMR imaging, it is important to note that intracoronary stents and coronary artery bypass graft surgery are not contraindications.4 Although small forces are generated within metal heart valves by the magnetic fields, they are minimal compared with the forces generated by the beating heart, and all mechanical heart valves are considered safe. When in doubt, various resources, such as www.imrser.org and www.mrisafety.com,5 are available to check a device’s safety within an MRI scanner.6–9

WHAT CMR CAN DO

Assessment of right and left ventricular function and mass

Assessment of left ventricular size, function and mass has been well validated in both autopsy and animal studies,10–12 and has excellent intraobserver and interobserver variability.13–18 This reproducibility allows for smaller sample size in studies requiring serial exams than other lower-resolution imaging such as echocardiography. CMR can quantify regional wall motion and myocardial strain with techniques such as the harmonic phase method (HARP),19 displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE),20 21 and spatial modulation magnetisation (SPAMM).22 These techniques can assess myocardial strain independent of the effects of through-plane motion. Real-time CMR can be used in situations where cardiac gating is not currently feasible. One example is the prenatal assessment of fetal cardiovascular abnormalities.23

Diagnosis of coronary artery disease

A single CMR study can provide information regarding the coronary arteries, left ventricular systolic function, myocardial perfusion, and viability (fig 1).
Figure 1

Comprehensive cardiovascular magnetic resonance with cine function, dipyridamole perfusion, and delayed enhancement: A 77-year-old man presents with exertional angina and a past medical history significant for hypertension and a prior stroke. In the top row, cine function demonstrates normal global and regional left ventricular systolic function. The dipyridamole perfusion image on the lower left panel demonstrates a severe perfusion defect in a multivessel coronary distribution, while the delayed enhancement image on the right lower panel demonstrates only a small subendocardial myocardial infarction of the inferoseptal wall, indicating a large ischaemic region with a large territory of viable myocardium.

Viability assessment

One of the major breakthroughs for the use of CMR was the development of gadolinium delayed enhancement techniques to assess for myocardial infarction.24 Gadolinium shortens tissue T1 relaxation time, a magnetic property inherent to all tissues. The operator can select an inversion time that will “null” normal myocardium resulting in images where viable myocardium appears uniformly dark while a region of myocardial infarction or fibrotic scar appears bright (fig 2). Dysfunctional but viable myocardium is expected to have functional recovery if revascularised (in the case of hibernating myocardium), with time (in the case of stunned myocardium), or with resynchronisation (in the case of dyssynchronous myocardium).
Figure 2

Delayed enhancement in a patient with a near-transmural anteroseptal myocardial infarction.

In a seminal paper by Kim et al, the delayed enhancement of myocardial infarction by CMR closely correlated with the histopathological triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) findings.25 Multiple studies have demonstrated the inverse relationship between the transmural extent of myocardial infarction and recovery of function, the higher spatial resolution of this technique compared with nuclear techniques, as well as the good correlation with biomarkers of necrosis.26–48 The reproducible nature of the delayed enhancement technique also makes it a natural choice for serial imaging of chronic infarctions.40

Myocardial perfusion

Myocardial perfusion has been a CMR research focus. The challenge has been obtaining enough signal, temporal resolution, spatial resolution, and spatial coverage, while minimising artifacts. Most groups use fast gradient recalled echo (FGRE), FGRE with echoplanar imaging (Hybrid EPI), and steady state free precession (SSFP) perfusion techniques, typically using adenosine or dipyridamole as the stressor. These sequences may be accelerated with parallel imaging techniques and performed with multiple gadolinium dosing schemes. The studies may be interpreted qualitatively, semi-quantitatively, or quantitatively. Despite the technical issues related to perfusion imaging, many papers document that CMR first-pass perfusion has comparable diagnostic accuracy to the alternative myocardial perfusion imaging standards.49–70

Dobutamine CMR

Dobutamine stress CMR was first described in the same year that dobutamine stress echocardiography was described.71 Dobutamine CMR has good sensitivity and specificity in the detection of significant coronary artery disease (table 1) with a safety profile similar to dobutamine echocardiography.72 While the sensitivity and specificity of CMR are comparable to stress echocardiography in patients with good echocardiographic windows, CMR performs better than stress echocardiography in patients with suboptimal echocardiographic windows.73–78 Furthermore, dobutamine stress CMR has prognostic value above and beyond the baseline ejection fraction.79 80
Table 1

Summary of dobutamine validations

YearFirst AuthorNExcludedReferenceSensitivitySpecificity
2006Paetsch771500Cath >50%7887
2006Jahnke75400Cath >50%8287
2004Paetsch6279Cath >50%8980
2004Wahl7817010Cath >50%8984
1999Hundley7416310Cath >50%8383
1999Nagel7620836Cath >50%8686

Acute chest pain in the hospital setting

Three major papers have looked at use of CMR in patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or early diagnosis of chest pain in the emergency department. In a study of 161 patients presenting with chest pain not associated with ST elevation, Kwong et al found that CMR had 100% sensitivity for non-ST elevation myocardial infarction and was a better predictor of ACS than standard clinical tests including the composite TIMI risk score.81 In a higher risk group of 68 patients with possible or probable ACS scheduled for coronary angiography, Plein et al found that a multi-component CMR consisting of cine function, adenosine and rest perfusion, delayed enhancement, and coronary artery imaging yielded a sensitivity of 96% and a specificity of 83% in predicting the presence of significant coronary artery disease.64 In another emergency department study of 141 patients with myocardial infarction excluded by serial troponin assays, Ingkanisorn et al found that adenosine stress CMR had excellent prognostic value as 100% of patients with adverse cardiovascular outcomes were detected with an overall specificity of 91%.54 CMR is also helpful in patients with atypical chest pain.82 For example, many patients with myocarditis present with chest pain, ECG abnormalities, elevated biomarkers, but normal coronary arteries. This diagnosis is easily made with CMR. The presence of atypical mid-wall or epicardial delayed enhancement distinguishes myocarditis from MI.83 85 Stress CMR perfusion can detect diffuse subendocardial ischaemia in patients with syndrome X.86 Acute chest pain from acute aortitis will present with irregularly thickened aortic wall and bright enhancement of the aortic wall on delayed enhancement imaging.87 88 CMR has been used in the diagnosis of stress cardiomyopathy (tako tsubo, left ventricular apical ballooning syndrome, and broken heart syndrome). Despite the profound left ventricular apical systolic dysfunction, there is little delayed enhancement in these patients.89–92

Coronary artery imaging

Although multidetector computed tomography (MSCT) is the most rapid and highest-resolution non-invasive technique for imaging the coronary arteries, CMR offers an alternative for imaging the coronary arteries. CMR does not require ionising radiation and can be combined with a multimodality CMR assessment of cardiac function, perfusion, and viability in a relatively short period of time.93 However, coronary imaging by CMR is still relatively complicated and many technical nuances require significant operator experience. A few studies indicate that CMR is not as far from clinical feasibility as many physicians assume. A multicentre study of 109 patients who underwent coronary magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) reported a sensitivity of 100%, a specificity of 85%, and an accuracy of 87% in the detection of left main artery or three-vessel disease.94 Sakuma et al performed three-dimensional whole-heart coronary MRA in 131 patients with a mean acquisition time of 12.9 (SD 4.3) minutes and a per patient sensitivity of 82%, specificity of 90%, and accuracy of 87%.95 However, most experts and clinical guidelines only support the use of CMR in determining the proximal course of anomalous coronary arteries (fig 3, coronary MRA).
Figure 3

Whole heart coronary magnetic resonance angiography. Image provided courtesy of Vibhas Deshpande, MR Research & Development, Siemens Medical Solutions.

Cardiomyopathy

CMR can characterise cardiomyopathies in unique ways based on the magnetic properties of myocardium.96–99 Assomull et al succinctly review the use of CMR in the evaluation of congestive heart failure.100 In hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, CMR can detect patches of myocardial fibrosis with intermediate delayed enhancement.101–103 CMR can diagnose hypertrophy missed by echocardiography and more accurately determine the extent of hypertrophy.104 In patients suspected of having arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C), CMR can detect global right ventricular abnormalities, right ventricular aneurysms, or regional wall motion abnormalities. Fibrofatty myocardial infiltration can be determined in patients suspected of having ARVD/C.105 Sen-Chowdhry et al have proposed modified criteria for the diagnosis of ARVD/C focusing on right ventricular size and function, right ventricular segmental dilatation, and regional right ventricular hypokinesis. These proposed criteria would improve the sensitivity in the detection of early or incompletely expressed disease.106 CMR can measure iron overload in the heart, particularly as a result of thalassaemia.73 107 Iron overload shortens T2* relaxation properties of the myocardium and liver. Intriguingly, some patients with thalassaemia have iron overload in the heart but not in the liver and vice versa.73 Thus, CMR determinations of iron overload may be better at assessing patient risk than relying on liver biopsy alone and may be used to follow therapy success. CMR is good at differentiating constrictive from restrictive cardiomyopathy due to each entity’s unique presentation and physiology. Many of the infiltrative cardiomyopathies such as amyloidosis, sarcoidosis, Chagas’ disease, and endomyocardial fibroelastosis have characteristic abnormalities on delayed enhancement.97 99 108–112 CMR can identify thickened pericardium as well as abnormal motion of the heart in constrictive cardiomyopathy. While both CT and CMR can detect thickened pericardium, CMR is better able to distinguish between pericardial thickening and small effusion than CT.113 Real-time imaging to evaluate the septum may demonstrate interventricular dependence.114 Real-time cine imaging of the inferior vena cava during respiration can also separate constrictive from restrictive physiology.115

Congenital heart disease

In a patient with congenital heart disease, anatomic connections or malformations may be identified, the direction of intracardiac shunts may be identified and quantified, and valvular anatomy and function may be assessed. Volumetric anatomic CMR depicts the complex vascular abnormalities associated with congenital syndromes and the surgical corrections. Echocardiography cannot always visualise the heart and great vessels in their entirety, particularly in adults with surgically corrected congenital heart disease. Repeated exposure to the radiation of CT is not desirable, especially in a paediatric population that is at greater risk for developing long-term radiation-related malignancies.116 CMR can provide more than simply anatomical imaging. A saturated black band technique highlights intracardiac shunting. Velocity encoded phase contrast techniques can quantify the severity of intracardiac shunts. Measuring pulmonary blood flow (Qp) in the pulmonary artery and systemic blood flow (Qs) in the aorta provides a noninvasive estimate of Qp/Qs and thus quantifies the degree of intracardiac shunting (fig 4). CMR can quantify the amount of valvular regurgitation (eg, in patients with Tetralogy of Fallot).
Figure 4

Pulmonic flow (Qp) and systemic flow (Qs) may be calculated non-invasively with cardiovascular magnetic resonance using simple phase-contrast techniques. This figure illustrates an abnormal Qp:QS of 1.6:1 in a patient with an atrial septal defect.

Valvular disease

CMR provides non-invasive clear anatomical valvular information that can impact clinical management of a patient. It is possible to differentiate a bicuspid from a tricuspid aortic valve (figs 5 and 6). CMR reproducibly characterises aortic valve anatomy and the determined aortic valve area correlates well with cardiac catheterisation.117
Figure 5

Black-blood fast spin echo technique to visualise the aortic valve.

Figure 6

During diastole cine imaging, an aortic valve appears tricuspid; however, during systole, it is apparent that the valve is functionally bicuspid with fusion of the right and left cusps.

Phase contrast techniques can reliably measure peak velocity and thus peak gradient in aortic stenosis. Valvular information in combination with accurate left ventricular volumes and assessment of thoracic aortic dilatation can assist in planning valvular replacement and, importantly, determine whether the aorta needs intervention as well. Similar data can be obtained in an assessment of the pulmonic valve, which is not always well-defined by transthoracic echocardiography. While most valvular lesions seen by echocardiography can be assessed by CMR, echocardiography has the advantages of widespread availability and validation. CMR provides additional information in patients who have poor echocardiographic windows and is useful in patients who are poor candidates for invasive transoesophageal echocardiography or when additional surgery beyond the valve is contemplated.

Assessment of cardiac masses

Through various tissue-characterising techniques (T2-weighted, T1-weighted, first-pass perfusion, and delayed enhancement), CMR can reliably distinguish between myocardium, fat, avascular tissue (eg, thrombus), and other tissue types, such as tumours (fig 7). CMR often aids in differentiating intracardiac masses from masses that externally compress the heart.
Figure 7

A 48-year-old woman presented with a markedly abnormal preoperative ECG and nuclear stress test indicating that she had an anteroseptal myocardial infarction. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance was able to demonstrate that the patient actually had an intraseptal mass (bright on the left) which was in fact a benign lipoma as demonstrated by fat saturation techniques (dark on the right after using a fat saturation technique to suppress the fat).

The ability to characterise normal structures or variants makes CMR superior to echocardiography in the assessment of intracardiac mass. Atrial structures such as Eustachian valve, crista terminalis, Chiari network, and lipomatous hypertrophy are commonly mistaken by echocardiography to be a mass, and CMR can help avoid more invasive diagnostic testing.118 Contrast-enhanced CMR is twice as sensitive as echocardiography in the detection of ventricular thrombi.119–121

Non-coronary vascular imaging

Aorta and great vessels

MRI and MRA can assess large and medium-sized vascular structures. Serial exams are particularly useful in the paediatric population with congenital abnormalities of the aorta. CMR is able to visualise congenital aortic abnormalities including right-sided aortic arch, cervical aortic arch, double aortic arch, and vascular ring. As many as 42% of surgically repaired coarctations present with restenosis, dissection, pseudoaneurysm, or aneurysm at a later date.122–124 Other common indications for CMR include assessment of aortic dilation and aneurysm, aortic dissection, aortic ulcer, and intramural haematoma. While a contrast CT is the study of choice in the acutely ill, haemodynamically unstable patient, in a haemodynamically stable patient a focused CMR exam of the aorta may be performed within approximately 10–15 minutes with little cooperation from the patient (fig 8). CMR is more sensitive than CT, echocardiography, and transoesophageal echocardiography in the diagnosis of intramural haematoma. CMR can also distinguish between an acute intramural haematoma and a chronic haematoma based upon the T1 and T2 characteristics of the bleed.125
Figure 8

This magnetic resonance angiography was performed in a Turner’s Syndrome patient. Note on the anterior view the dilated size of the ascending aorta (red arrow) in comparison with the descending aorta, as well as the persistent left-sided superior vena cava (green arrow). The posterior view demonstrates the malformed aortic arch (red arrow).

Pulmonary veins

Three-dimensional MRA can help guide electrophysiological interventions and can detect pulmonary vein stenosis after the procedure. It is possible to merge 3D MRA with fluoroscopy in the electrophysiology lab to help guide catheter tip placement and the ablation. CMR is also useful for determining the flow patterns through vessels.126

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

CMR continues to develop rapidly. Contrast agents targeted to specific tissue types are in development. For example, thrombus-avid contrast agents are feasible.127–129 Lipid-specific agents have also been studied. Stem cells and macrophages have been identified with iron-based contrast agents and tracked in vivo.130–133 Interventional CMR is also a field with growing interest. A variety of percutaneous procedures used to treat vascular abnormalities and congenital heart disease are in development.134–137 Even CMR-guided percutaneous replacement of the aortic valve is feasible.138 CMR can help precisely guide delivery of drugs and stem cells.139–141

LIMITATIONS

There are many factors that have slowed the dissemination of CMR. CMR is expensive and requires a skilled multidisciplinary team. In-depth CMR training is not readily available. Insufficient numbers of adequately trained physicians limit utilisation and dissemination of CMR. In many countries, reimbursement of CMR is not well-established. Although gadolinium-based contrast agents are in everyday clinical use worldwide, cardiovascular applications are not yet approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration. Currently it is easier to run an MRI for profit by doing non-cardiac applications. Thus, significant economic issues must be addressed. MRI scanners trigger claustrophobia in many patients. Other patients cannot undergo MRI scans due to implanted devices like pacemakers or defibrillators. Arrhythmias and respiratory insufficiency compromise many of the highest quality CMR methods. Technology development can solve most of these issues.

CONCLUSION

With advances in CMR technology, multiple clinical indications have followed. Although there is overlap with other cardiac imaging modalities, CMR often works in a complementary fashion to these other techniques or resolves residual diagnostic dilemmas. The strengths of CMR lie in its ability to comprehensively image cardiac anatomy, function, perfusion, viability and physiology, and put this information in the context of the wide field of view of surrounding vascular and non-cardiac anatomy. At a time when serious concerns are being raised about the medical use of ionising radiation, it is reassuring to know that CMR provides high-quality diagnostic information without a need for radiation. CKMB, muscle and brain subunits of creatine kinase; CMR, cardiovascular magnetic resonance; MI, myocardial infarction; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention. CMR, cardiovascular magnetic resonance. *adapted from ACCF/ACR/SCCT/SCMR/ASNC/NASCI/SCAI/SIR 2006 appropriateness criteria for cardiac computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:1475–97.
Table 2

Summary of gadolinium delayed enhancement publications

YearAuthorsnAcute vs chronicMajor findings
2006Baks T et al2727AcuteDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
Chronic
2006Gerber BL et al3116AcuteDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
21Chronic
2005Baks T et al2622AcuteDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
Chronic
2005Bello D et al.2948ChronicDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size and predicted inducibility of ventricular tachycardia.
2005Ibrahim T et al3333AcuteDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
2005Selvanayagam JB et al4550AcuteDelayed enhancement correlated with biomarkers of necrosis.
24Chronic
2004Ingkanisorn WP et al3433AcuteDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function and correlated with biomarkers of necrosis.
20Chronic
2004Lund GK et al3960AcuteDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
2004Nelson C et al4160ChronicDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
2004Selvanayagam JB et al4452ChronicDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
2004Wellnhofer E et al4729ChronicDelayed enhancement and dobutamine CMR predicted recovery of function.
2003Beek AM et al2830AcuteDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
Chronic
2003Knuesel PR et al3719ChronicDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
2003Kühl HP et al3826ChronicDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
2003Wagner A et al4691ChronicDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
2002Gerber BL et al3220AcuteDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.
Chronic
2002Klein C et al3631ChronicDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
2002Mahrholdt H et al4020ChronicDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size and was reproducible in two separate scans.
2002Perin EC et al4215ChronicThe unipolar voltage recorded during electromechanical mapping varied inversely with the amount of delayed enhancement.
2001Choi KM et al3024AcuteDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function and correlated with biomarkers of necrosis.
Chronic
2001Ricciardi MJ et al4314AcuteDelayed enhancement correlated with biomarkers of necrosis. Microinfarcts were detected in patients who had PCI-related elevations in CKMB.
6Chronic
2001Wu E et al4882ChronicDelayed enhancement correlated with MI size.
2000Kim RJ et al3550ChronicDelayed enhancement predicted recovery of function.

CKMB, muscle and brain subunits of creatine kinase; CMR, cardiovascular magnetic resonance; MI, myocardial infarction; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention.

Table 3

Summary of vasodilator perfusion CMR validation publications

YearFirst authornExcludedStressReferenceSensitivitySpecificity
2007Merkle et al702280AdenosineCath >50%9386
2006Ingkanisorn et al541414AdenosinePrognosis10093
2006Klem et al58923AdenosineCath >70%8987
2006Pilz et al631765AdenosineCath >70%9683
2006Rieber et al66507AdenosineCath >50% and FFR8890
2005Okuda et al60330DipyridamoleCath >70%8487
2005Plein et al6592AdenosineCath >70%8882
2005Sakuma et al67400DipyridamoleCath >70%8168
2004Bunce et al50350AdenosineCath >50%7471
2004Giang et al529414AdenosineCath >50%9375
2004Kawase et al56500NicorandilCath >70%9494
2004Paetsch et al61490AdenosineCath >75%8980
2004Paetsch et al6279AdenosineQCA >50%9162
2004Plein et al64724AdenosineCath >70%8883
2004Takase et al691020DipyridamoleCath >50%9385
2003Doyle et al5119915DipyridamoleCath >70%7882
2003Ishida et al551040DipyridamoleCath >70%8482
2003Kinoshita et al5727DipyridamoleCath >75%5577
2003Nagel et al59906AdenosineCath >75%8890
2002Ibrahim et al5325AdenosineQCA >75%6989
2001Schwitter et al68481DipyridamoleQCA >50%8594
2000Al-Saadi et al49406DipyridamoleCath >75%9083

CMR, cardiovascular magnetic resonance.

Table 4

Appropriate indications for the use of CMR142*

Detection of CAD: Symptomatic—evaluation of chest pain syndrome (use of vasodilator perfusion CMR or dobutamine stress function CMR)
    Intermediate pre-test probability of CAD
    ECG uninterpretable OR unable to exercise
Detection of CAD: Symptomatic—evaluation of intracardiac structures (use of MR coronary angiography)
    Evaluation of suspected coronary anomalies
Risk assessment with prior test results (use of vasodilator perfusion CMR or dobutamine stress function CMR)
    Coronary angiography (catheterisation or CT)
    Stenosis of unclear significance
Structure and Function—evaluation of ventricular and valvular function
Procedures may include LV/RV mass and volumes, MR angiography, quantification of valvular disease, and delayed contrast enhancement
    Assessment of complex congenital heart disease including anomalies of coronary circulation, great vessels, and cardiac chambers and valves
    Procedures may include LV/RV mass and volumes, MR angiography, quantification of valvular disease, and contrast enhancement
    Evaluation of LV function following myocardial infarction OR in heart failure patients
    Patients with technically limited images from echocardiogram
    Quantification of LV function
    Discordant information that is clinically significant from prior tests
    Evaluation of specific cardiomyopathies (infiltrative (amyloid, sarcoid), HCM, or due to cardiotoxic therapies)
    Use of delayed enhancement
    Characterisation of native and prosthetic cardiac valves—including planimetry of stenotic disease and quantification of regurgitant disease
    Patients with technically limited images from echocardiogram or TEE</item></item-list>
    Evaluation for arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC)
    Patients presenting with syncope or ventricular arrhythmia
    Evaluation of myocarditis or myocardial infarction with normal coronary arteries
    Positive cardiac enzymes without obstructive atherosclerosis on angiography
Structure and Function—evaluation of intracardiac and extracardiac structures
    Evaluation of cardiac mass (suspected tumour or thrombus)
    Use of contrast for perfusion and enhancement
    Evaluation of pericardial conditions (pericardial mass, constrictive pericarditis)
    Evaluation for aortic dissection
    Evaluation of pulmonary veins prior to radiofrequency ablation for atrial fibrillation
    Left atrial and pulmonary venous anatomy including dimensions of veins for mapping purposes
Detection of myocardial scar and viability—evaluation of myocardial scar (use of late gadolinium enhancement)
    To determine the location and extent of myocardial necrosis including “no reflow” regions
    Post acute myocardial infarction
    To determine viability prior to revascularisation
    Establish likelihood of recovery of function with revascularisation (PCI or CABG) or medical therapy
    To determine viability prior to revascularisation
    Viability assessment by SPECT or dobutamine echo has provided “equivocal or indeterminate” results

*adapted from ACCF/ACR/SCCT/SCMR/ASNC/NASCI/SCAI/SIR 2006 appropriateness criteria for cardiac computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006;48:1475–97.

  140 in total

Review 1.  [Tako-Tsubo cardiomyopathy--a novel cardiac entity?].

Authors:  Holger M Nef; Helge Möllmann; Christian W Hamm; Albrecht Elsässer
Journal:  Herz       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 1.443

2.  Determination of interobserver variability for identifying inducible left ventricular wall motion abnormalities during dobutamine stress magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Ingo Paetsch; Cosima Jahnke; Victor A Ferrari; Frank E Rademakers; Patricia A Pellikka; W Gregory Hundley; Don Poldermans; Jeroen J Bax; Karl Wegscheider; Eckart Fleck; Eike Nagel
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2006-04-13       Impact factor: 29.983

Review 3.  ACCF/ACR/SCCT/SCMR/ASNC/NASCI/SCAI/SIR 2006 appropriateness criteria for cardiac computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation Quality Strategic Directions Committee Appropriateness Criteria Working Group, American College of Radiology, Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, North American Society for Cardiac Imaging, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, and Society of Interventional Radiology.

Authors:  Robert C Hendel; Manesh R Patel; Christopher M Kramer; Michael Poon; Robert C Hendel; James C Carr; Nancy A Gerstad; Linda D Gillam; John McB Hodgson; Raymond J Kim; Christopher M Kramer; John R Lesser; Edward T Martin; Joseph V Messer; Rita F Redberg; Geoffrey D Rubin; John S Rumsfeld; Allen J Taylor; Wm Guy Weigold; Pamela K Woodard; Ralph G Brindis; Robert C Hendel; Pamela S Douglas; Eric D Peterson; Michael J Wolk; Joseph M Allen; Manesh R Patel
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2006-10-03       Impact factor: 24.094

4.  Cardiac magnetic resonance perfusion imaging for the functional assessment of coronary artery disease: a comparison with coronary angiography and fractional flow reserve.

Authors:  Johannes Rieber; Armin Huber; Isabelle Erhard; Silvia Mueller; Michael Schweyer; Andreas Koenig; Thomas M Schiele; Karl Theisen; Uwe Siebert; Stefan O Schoenberg; Maximilian Reiser; Volker Klauss
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2006-05-23       Impact factor: 29.983

5.  Absolute assessment of aortic valve stenosis by planimetry using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging: comparison with transesophageal echocardiography, transthoracic echocardiography, and cardiac catheterisation.

Authors:  Patricia Reant; Mathieu Lederlin; Stephane Lafitte; Karim Serri; Michel Montaudon; Olivier Corneloup; Raymond Roudaut; Francois Laurent
Journal:  Eur J Radiol       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 3.528

6.  Clinical implication of adenosine-stress cardiac magnetic resonance imaging as potential gatekeeper prior to invasive examination in patients with AHA/ACC class II indication for coronary angiography.

Authors:  Guenter Pilz; Peter Bernhardt; Markus Klos; Eman Ali; Michael Wild; Berthold Höfling
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2006-08-16       Impact factor: 5.460

7.  Cardiac sarcoidosis evaluated with gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance and contrast-enhanced 64-slice computed tomography.

Authors:  Jan-Peter Smedema; Rene Truter; Petra A de Klerk; Leonie Zaaiman; Leonie White; Anton F Doubell
Journal:  Int J Cardiol       Date:  2005-10-28       Impact factor: 4.164

8.  Clinical, imaging, and pathological characteristics of left ventricular thrombus: a comparison of contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, transthoracic echocardiography, and transesophageal echocardiography with surgical or pathological validation.

Authors:  Monvadi B Srichai; Chelif Junor; L Leonardo Rodriguez; Arthur E Stillman; Richard A Grimm; Michael L Lieber; Joan A Weaver; Nicholas G Smedira; Richard D White
Journal:  Am Heart J       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 4.749

9.  MRI to detect atherosclerosis with gadolinium-containing immunomicelles targeting the macrophage scavenger receptor.

Authors:  Michael J Lipinski; Vardan Amirbekian; Juan C Frias; Juan Gilberto S Aguinaldo; Venkatesh Mani; Karen C Briley-Saebo; Valentin Fuster; John T Fallon; Edward A Fisher; Zahi A Fayad
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 4.668

10.  Cardiac magnetic resonance appearance of myocarditis caused by high dose IL-2: similarities to community-acquired myocarditis.

Authors:  W Patricia Ingkanisorn; D Ian Paterson; Katherine R Calvo; Douglas R Rosing; Douglas J Schwartzentruber; Anthon R Fuisz; Andrew E Arai
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 5.364

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  11 in total

1.  Four-dimensional phase contrast MRI with accelerated dual velocity encoding.

Authors:  Elizabeth J Nett; Kevin M Johnson; Alex Frydrychowicz; Alejandro Munoz Del Rio; Eric Schrauben; Christopher J Francois; Oliver Wieben
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2012-01-26       Impact factor: 4.813

Review 2.  Non-invasive imaging of microvascular damage.

Authors:  L Galiuto; L Natale; L Leccisotti; G Locorotondo; A Giordano; L Bonomo; F Crea
Journal:  J Nucl Cardiol       Date:  2009-08-25       Impact factor: 5.952

Review 3.  [Indications for magnetic resonance imaging in Internal Medicine. When do we really need this technology?].

Authors:  A G Schreyer; K Debl; H Herfarth
Journal:  Internist (Berl)       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 0.743

Review 4.  Molecular imaging of coronary atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction: considerations for the bench and perspectives for the clinic.

Authors:  Florian Leuschner; Matthias Nahrendorf
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2011-03-04       Impact factor: 17.367

5.  PET/MRI of inflammation in myocardial infarction.

Authors:  Won Woo Lee; Brett Marinelli; Anja M van der Laan; Brena F Sena; Rostic Gorbatov; Florian Leuschner; Partha Dutta; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Takuya Ueno; Mark P V Begieneman; Hans W M Niessen; Jan J Piek; Claudio Vinegoni; Mikael J Pittet; Filip K Swirski; Ahmed Tawakol; Marcelo Di Carli; Ralph Weissleder; Matthias Nahrendorf
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2012-01-10       Impact factor: 24.094

6.  Quantitative T 2* assessment of acute and chronic myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in mice.

Authors:  Eissa N E Aguor; Fatih Arslan; Cees W A van de Kolk; Marcel G J Nederhoff; Pieter A Doevendans; Cees J A van Echteld; Gerard Pasterkamp; Gustav J Strijkers
Journal:  MAGMA       Date:  2012-02-11       Impact factor: 2.310

7.  Cardiac imaging in adults with congenital heart disease: unknowns and issues related to diagnosis.

Authors:  Cylen Javidan-Nejad; Anderanik Tomasian; Elham Najafpour
Journal:  Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2013-10

Review 8.  Evaluation of the aortic and mitral valves with cardiac computed tomography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Sung Min Ko; Meong Gun Song; Hweung Kon Hwang
Journal:  Int J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2012-11-09       Impact factor: 2.357

9.  Myocardial late gadolinium enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance in patients with cirrhosis.

Authors:  Dirk Lossnitzer; Henning Steen; Alexandra Zahn; Stephanie Lehrke; Celine Weiss; Karl Heinz Weiss; Evangelos Giannitsis; Wolfgang Stremmel; Peter Sauer; Hugo A Katus; Daniel N Gotthardt
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson       Date:  2010-08-13       Impact factor: 5.364

10.  Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging of isolated perfused pig hearts in a 3T clinical MR scanner.

Authors:  Andreas Schuster; Amedeo Chiribiri; Masaki Ishida; Geraint Morton; Matthias Paul; Shazia T Hussain; Boris Bigalke; Divaka Perera; Tobias Schaeffter; Eike Nagel
Journal:  Interv Med Appl Sci       Date:  2012-12-27
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