| Literature DB >> 18570661 |
Aditya Jain1, Harikrishna Tandri, Hugh Calkins, David A Bluemke.
Abstract
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (ARVD) is a genetic cardiomyopathy characterized clinically by ventricular arrhythmias and progressive right ventricular (RV) dysfunction. The histopathologic hallmark is fibro-fatty replacement of RV myocardium. It is inherited in an autosomal pattern with variable penetrance. ARVD is unique in that it most commonly presents in young, otherwise healthy and highly athletic individuals. The cause of ARVD is not well-known but recent evidence suggests strongly that it is a disease of desmosomal dysfunction. The disease involvement is not limited only to the RV as left ventricle (LV) has also been reportedly affected. Diagnosis of ARVD is challenging and is currently based upon a multi-disciplinary work-up of the patient as defined by the Task Force. Currently, implanted cardioverter defibrillators (ICD) are routinely used to prevent sudden death in patients with ARVD. Cardiovascular MR is an important non-invasive diagnostic modality that allows both qualitative and quantitative evaluation of RV. This article reviews the genetics of ARVD, current status and role of CMR in the diagnosis of ARVD and LV involvement in ARVD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18570661 PMCID: PMC2483704 DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-10-32
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Criteria for diagnosis of ARVD [5]
| • |
| Severe dilatation and reduction of right ventricular ejection fraction with no (or only mild) left ventricular impairment |
| Localized right ventricular aneurysms (akinetic or dyskinetic areas with diastolic bulging) |
| Severe segmental dilatation of the right ventricle |
| • |
| Mild global right ventricular dilatation and/or ejection fraction reduction with normal left ventricle |
| Mild segmental dilatation of the right ventricle |
| Regional right ventricular hypokinesia |
| • |
| Fibrofatty replacement of myocardium on endomyocardial biopsy |
| • |
| Inverted T waves in right precordial leads (V2 and V3) in people aged >12 years, in absence of right bundle branch block |
| • |
| Epsilon waves or localized prolongation (>110 ms) of the QRS complex in right precordial leads (V1 - V3) |
| • |
| Late potentials (signal-averaged ECG) |
| • |
| Left bundle branch block type ventricular tachycardia (sustained and non-sustained) by ECG, Holter or exercise testing |
| Frequent ventricular extra-systoles (>1000/24 hours) by Holter |
| • |
| Familial disease confirmed at necropsy or surgery |
| • |
| Family history of premature sudden death (<35 years) due to suspected right ventricular dysplasia |
| Familial history (clinical diagnosis based on present criteria) |
*Detected by echocardiography, angiography, magnetic resonance imaging, or radionuclide scintigraphy.
The diagnosis of ARVD would be fulfilled by the presence of two major, or one major plus two minor criteria or four minor criteria from different groups.
Candidate genes for ARVD [37]
| Desmosomal cadherins (desmocollins; desmogleins)* |
| Desmoplakin* |
| Emerin |
| Plectin |
| Plakophilin* |
| Tyrosine kinases that phosphorylate desmosomal proteins |
| α-catenin |
| β-catenin |
| γ-catenin (junctional plakoglobin)* |
| N-cadherin |
| Connexin 43 |
| Cardiac ryanodine receptor* |
| Components of dystrophic-glycoprotein complex |
| Desmin |
| Laminin receptor-1 |
| Myotonic dystrophy protein kinase-1 |
| Transforming growth factor β3* |
*genes that have been definitively implicated in ARVD.
Of the other genes listed above, many are currently under investigation for a potential etiological role in ARVD
Figure 1A. Axial black-blood image from a patient with ARVD showing fat infiltration and thinning of the underlying myocardial wall (arrow).B. Axial fat-suppressed image from the same patient at the same level showing an irregular epicardial surface of the RV due to fat replacement of the RV (arrow).
Figure 2Axial bright-blood image from a patient with ARVD showing a subtle 5 mm aneurysm near the moderator band (arrow).
Figure 3Axial end-diastolic bright-blood image from a patient with ARVD showing RV dilatation. Note the diameter of RV is greater than LV at the mid-ventricular level.
Figure 4Short-axial bright-blood image from a patient with ARVD showing increased trabeculation in the RV (arrows).
Figure 5Axial bright-blood image from a patient with ARVD showing enlargement of RV outflow tract (large arrow). Note diameter of RV outflow tract is greater than that of the adjacent aorta (small arrow).
CMR Protocol for ARVD
| Axial imaging plane provides the best view of the right ventricular anterior wall and the right ventricular outflow tract. Prescribe the axial images starting from the diaphragm to the pulmonary artery. |
| TR = 2 R-R intervals |
| TE = 5 msec (minimum-full) (GE); TE 30 msec (Siemens) |
| Slice thickness = 5 mm |
| Interslice gap = 5 mm and |
| Field of view (FOV) = 28 cm |
| ETL 16–24 |
| Same superior to inferior coverage as sequence 2. |
| TR = 3.5 msec (GE); TR 40–50 msec (Siemens) |
| TE = minimum |
| Flip angle = 45–70° |
| Slice thickness = 8 mm |
| Interslice gap = 2 mm |
| FOV = 36–40 cm |
| 16–20 views per segment |
| Parallel imaging n = 2 is optional |
| The parameters for this sequence are the same as sequence 3. |
| The parameters for this sequence are the same as sequence 2. |
| This sequence is optional and usually adds 10 extra minutes to the total scanning time. Repeat series 2 with chemical selective fat suppression. |
| This sequence is prescribed from the four-chamber view. Cover the entire left ventricle. These are performed after gadolinium administration, in order to give time for gadolinium washout. The parameters are identical to sequence 3. |
| 4 chamber view, using TI scout sequences or trial TI times to suppress normal myocardium. |
| Same slice coverage as short axis cine images. |
| TR/TE per manufacturer recommendations |
| TI : optimized to suppress the left ventricle |
| Flip angle = 20–25° |
| Slice thickness = 8 mm |
| Interslice gap = 2 mm |
| FOV = 36–40 cm |
| No parallel imaging |
| Use phase sensitive inversion recovery if available (PSIR) |
| Same slice coverage as axial cine images. Pulse sequence same as sequence 9. |
| TI : optimized to suppress the right ventricle |
| Use phase sensitive inversion recovery if available (PSIR) |
Patient preparation: If the patient is known to have frequent ventricular ectopy, the authors recommend the use of oral Metoprolol 50 mg, 1 hour prior to the procedure provided that the patient has no contraindications. If ventricular arrhythmias are frequent and will substantially impact image quality, the exam should be terminated at this point.
***GADOLINIUM IS ADMINISTERED ACCORDING TO INSTITUTIONAL PROTOCOL (usually 0.15 – 0.2 MMOL/KG)
Figure 6A. Axial end-diastolic bright-blood image from a patient with ARVD. The basal free wall (arrow) appears smooth and regular, with no aneurysms. B. Axial end-systolic bright-blood image from the same patient. A small aneurysm forms at the basal free wall due to dyssynchronous contraction of the RV (arrow).
Figure 7Axial bright-blood image from a patient with ARVD showing a thinned lateral wall of the LV (arrow) due to fatty replacement.