| Literature DB >> 19698105 |
Adam N Mather1, Timothy Lockie, Eike Nagel, Michael Marber, Divaka Perera, Simon Redwood, Aleksandra Radjenovic, Ansuman Saha, John P Greenwood, Sven Plein.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The presence and extent of microvascular obstruction (MO) after acute myocardial infarction can be measured by first-pass gadolinium-enhanced perfusion cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) or after gadolinium injection with early or late enhancement (EGE/LGE) imaging. The volume of MO measured by these three methods may differ because contrast agent diffusion into the MO reduces its apparent extent over time. Theoretically, first-pass perfusion CMR should be the most accurate method to measure MO, but this technique has been limited by lower spatial resolution than EGE and LGE as well as incomplete cardiac coverage. These limitations of perfusion CMR can be overcome using spatio-temporal undersampling methods. The purpose of this study was to compare the extent of MO by high resolution first-pass k-t SENSE accelerated perfusion, EGE and LGE.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19698105 PMCID: PMC2733303 DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-11-33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Figure 1A) CMR images from a patient with acute lateral myocardial infarction. Arrows point to MO (areas of hypoenhancement) on first-pass perfusion (left), EGE (middle) and LGE (right). B) CMR images from a patient with acute anterior myocardial infarction. Arrows point to MO (areas of hypoenhancement) on first-pass perfusion (left), EGE (middle) and LGE (right).
Summary of baseline characteristics of study patients (n = 34)
| N = 34 | |
| Age (median, interquartile range) | 63 (IQR 56-66) |
| Male % | 2 |
| Current smoking % | 50 |
| Family history of premature coronary artery disease % | 29 |
| Hypertension % | 29 |
| Hypercholesterolaemia % | 35 |
| Diabetes % | 9 |
| Infarct-related artery % | |
| Left anterior descending artery | 32 |
| Left circumflex artery | 24 |
| Right coronary artery | 44 |
| Primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI) % | 100 |
| TIMI flow post-PCI % | |
| TIMI 3 | 85 |
| TIMI 2 | 15 |
| TIMI1 | 0 |
| Use of Glycoprotein 2b/3a inhibitors % | 53 |
| Use of Bivalirudin % | 47 |
| Use of percutaneous thrombectomy device % | 21 |
Summary of the intra-observer variability and inter-observer variability assessments for the measurement of MO by first-pass perfusion, EGE and LGE.
| First-pass perfusion | 0.65 | 5.2 | 0.54 | 6.54 |
| EGE | 0.48 | 8.14 | 0.29 | 4.89 |
| LGE | 0.2 | 6.29 | 0.32 | 10.16 |
Figure 2Graph demonstrating correlation between MO mass (g) measured by k-t SENSE first-pass perfusion and EGE (r = 0.91). Diagonal black line represents the line of identity.
Figure 3Bland-Altman plot demonstrating the agreement of MO mass as measured by first-pass perfusion and EGE. The central horizontal line represents the mean bias and the red dashed lines represent the limits of agreement (i.e. 2 SD from the mean difference of MO mass measured by first-pass perfusion minus EGE).
Figure 4Bland-Altman plot demonstrating the agreement of MO mass as measured by first-pass perfusion and LGE. The central horizontal line represents the mean bias and the red dashed lines represent the limits of agreement (i.e. 2 SD from the mean difference of MO mass measured by first-pass perfusion minus LGE).
Figure 5Bland-Altman plot demonstrating the agreement of MO mass as measured by EGE and LGE. The central horizontal line represents the mean bias and the red dashed lines represent the limits of agreement (i.e. 2 SD from the mean difference of MO measured by EGE minus LGE).