| Literature DB >> 22348519 |
Radwa A Noureldin1, Songtao Liu, Marcelo S Nacif, Daniel P Judge, Marc K Halushka, Theodore P Abraham, Carolyn Ho, David A Bluemke.
Abstract
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common genetic disease of the heart. HCM is characterized by a wide range of clinical expression, ranging from asymptomatic mutation carriers to sudden cardiac death as the first manifestation of the disease. Over 1000 mutations have been identified, classically in genes encoding sarcomeric proteins. Noninvasive imaging is central to the diagnosis of HCM and cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is increasingly used to characterize morphologic, functional and tissue abnormalities associated with HCM. The purpose of this review is to provide an overview of the clinical, pathological and imaging features relevant to understanding the diagnosis of HCM. The early and overt phenotypic expression of disease that may be identified by CMR is reviewed. Diastolic dysfunction may be an early marker of the disease, present in mutation carriers prior to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). Late gadolinium enhancement by CMR is present in approximately 60% of HCM patients with LVH and may provide novel information regarding risk stratification in HCM. It is likely that integrating genetic advances with enhanced phenotypic characterization of HCM with novel CMR techniques will importantly improve our understanding of this complex disease.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22348519 PMCID: PMC3309929 DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-14-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Major risk factors for the assessment of sudden cardiac death in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy* (adapted from [7])
| Major risk factors | Possible risk factors in individual patients |
|---|---|
| Cardiac arrest/ventricular fibrillation or spontaneously occurring and sustained VT | Atrial fibrillation |
| Family history of premature HCM-related sudden death | |
| Intense physical exertion | |
| Abnormal upright exercise blood pressure response that is attenuated or hypertensive (of greater predictive value in patients less than 50 yrs old or if hypotensive) | High risk gene mutation |
| Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia by Holter examination | |
| Unexplained syncope, especially in young patients or when recurrent or exertional |
*risk factor assessed by imaging.
Figure 1Left ventricular patterns in HCM, each drawing is accompanied by its corresponding image, (A, a) normal LV, (B, b) sigmoid septum showing SAM of mitral valve (white arrow), (C, c) reversed septal contour, note that there is no signs of LVOT, (D, d) mid ventricular hypertrophy, (E, e) Apical HCM, (F, f) symmetric HCM.
Accuracy of CMR for detection of HCM in comparison to 2-dimensional echocardiography
| Authors | Year | Journal | Number of patients | % of HCM patients detected by MRI only | Location of CMR detected abnormality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maron et al.[ | 2009 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 333 | 12% | Anterolateral free wall, posterior portion of septum, LV apex |
| Maron et al.[ | 2007 | Circulation | 2 | 100% | Anterior free wall |
| Rickers et al.[ | 2005 | Circulation | 48 | 6% | Anterolateral free wall |
| Moon et al. [ | 2004 | Heart | 10 | 100 | Apical |
| Pons-Llado et al.[ | 1997 | Am. Journal of Cardiology | 30 | Echocardiography underestimated wall thickness | Anterior basal, septal anterior mid-ventricular, lateral mid-ventricular |
| Posma et al. [ | 1996 | American Heart Journal | 52 | Echocardiography underestimated wall thickness in 37%. | Anterobasal septum, anterolateral wall, posteroseptal wall, apical septum, posterior wall |
Incidence of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) in HCM by CMR
| Author | Year | Journal | Number of patients | % of patients with LGE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| O'Hanlon et al. [ | 2010 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 217 | 63% |
| Bruder et al.[ | 2010 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 220 | 67.2% |
| Ho et al. [ | 2010 | The New England Journal of Medicine | 28 | 71% |
| Rubinshtein et al. [ | 2010 | Circulation Heart Failure | 424 | 56% |
| Kown et al. [ | 2009 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 60 | 63% |
| Rudolph et al. [ | 2009 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 36 | 72% |
| Maron et al. [ | 2008 | Circulation Heart Failure | 202 | 55% |
| Adabag et al. [ | 2008 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 177 | 40.6% |
| Kwon et al. [ | 2008 | International J. of Cardiovascular Imaging | 68 | 57% |
| Abdel Aty et al. [ | 2008 | Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 27 | 33% |
| Paya et al. [ | 2008 | Journal of Cardiac Failure | 120 | 69% |
| Melacini et al. [ | 2008 | International Journal of Cardiology | 44 | 80% |
| Kim et al. [ | 2008 | Journal of Magnetic resonance Imaging | 25 | 84% |
| Debl et al. [ | 2006 | Heart | 22 | 73% |
| Soler et al. [ | 2006 | Journal of Computed Assisted Tomography | 53 | 56.6% |
| Teraoke et al. [ | 2004 | Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 59 | 76.3% |
| Bogaert et al. [ | 2003 | American Journal of Roentgenology | 11 | 63.6% |
| Choudhury et al. [ | 2002 | Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 21 | 81% |
| Summary LGE reports: | Late enhancement | 1814 | 65% [range, 33-84%] | |
Relationship between presence of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) and clinical cardiac events in HCM
| Study | Number of patients | % of study population with LGE | Event Rate | Hazard ratio (HR) or relative risk (RR) | Primary endpoint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O'Hanlon et al. 2010 [ | 217 | 63 | 24.5% LGE+ vs. 9.9% LGE- had primary endpoint | HR 3.4 [1.4-8.1] | Cardiovascular death, unplanned cardiovascular admission, sustained ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation, appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator discharge |
| Rubinshtein et al. 2010[ | 424 | 56 | 3.3% of LGE+ patients had SCD/ICD | n/a | Sudden cardiac death and appropriate implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) discharge |
| Bruder et al. 2010 [ | 220 | 67.2 | 94% LGE+ vs. 66% LGE- had primary endpoint | HR 8.0 [1.0-61.9] | Sudden cardiac death and appropriate implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) discharge. |
| Adabag et al. 2008 [ | 177 | 40.6 | 28% LGE+ vs. 4% LGE- w/NSVT | RR 7.3 [2.6-20.4] | Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) by Holter monitor |
| Paya et al. 2008 [ | 120 | 69 | 38% LGE+ vs. 8% LGE- had NSVT (p < 0.05) | not indicated | Nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (NSVT) by Holter monitor |
| Suk et al. 2008 [ | 25 | 64 | 88% LGE+ vs. 53% LGE- had VT (p < 0.05) | not indicated | Ventricular tachycardia by Holter or resting ECG |
HF: Heart failure
ICD: intra-cardiac defibrillator.
NSVT: Non-sustained ventricular tachycardia
OR: Odds ratio.
PVCs: Premature ventricular contractions
VT: Ventricular tachycardia
Figure 2Late gadolinium enhancement patterns involving the anterior and posterior RV insertion points, as shown; the interventricular septum is involved, particularly the anteroseptal basal segment (three arrow heads).
Figure 3Patchy mid wall, variable sized foci of hyperenhancement in a non-coronary distribution, involving mainly the hypertrophied parts (arrow heads). Right ventricle is also hypertrophied (large arrows).