Literature DB >> 22936681

Cardiovascular magnetic resonance measurement of myocardial extracellular volume in health and disease.

Daniel M Sado1, Andrew S Flett, Sanjay M Banypersad, Steven K White, Viviana Maestrini, Giovanni Quarta, Robin H Lachmann, Elaine Murphy, Atul Mehta, Derralynn A Hughes, William J McKenna, Andrew M Taylor, Derek J Hausenloy, Philip N Hawkins, Perry M Elliott, James C Moon.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To measure and assess the significance of myocardial extracellular volume (ECV), determined non-invasively by equilibrium contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance, as a clinical biomarker in health and a number of cardiac diseases of varying pathophysiology.
DESIGN: Prospective study.
SETTING: Tertiary referral cardiology centre in London, UK. PATIENTS: 192 patients were mainly recruited from specialist clinics. We studied patients with Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD, n=17), dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM, n=31), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM, n=31), severe aortic stenosis (AS, n=66), cardiac AL amyloidosis (n=27) and myocardial infarction (MI, n=20). The results were compared with those for 81 normal subjects.
RESULTS: In normal subjects, ECV (mean (95% CI), measured in the septum) was slightly higher in women than men (0.273 (0.264 to 0.282 vs 0.233 (0.225 to 0.244), p<0.001), with no change with age. In disease, the ECV of AFD was the same as in normal subjects but higher in all other diseases (p<0.001). Mean ECV was the same in DCM, HCM and AS (0.280, 0.291, 0.276 respectively), but higher in cardiac AL amyloidosis and higher again in MI (0.466 and 0.585 respectively, each p<0.001). Where ECV was elevated, correlations were found with indexed left ventricular mass, end systolic volume, ejection fraction and left atrial area in apparent disease-specific patterns.
CONCLUSIONS: Myocardial ECV, assessed non-invasively in the septum with equilibrium contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance, shows gender differences in normal individuals and disease-specific variability. Therefore, ECV shows early potential to be a useful biomarker in health and disease.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22936681     DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2012-302346

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


  113 in total

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Authors:  Robert J H Miller; Louise Thomson; Ryan Levine; Sadia J Dimbil; Jignesh Patel; Jon A Kobashigawa; Evan Kransdorf; Debiao Li; Daniel S Berman; Balaji Tamarappoo
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Authors:  Natsuko Mukai-Yatagai; Nobuhiko Haruki; Yoshiharu Kinugasa; Yasutoshi Ohta; Hatsue Ishibashi-Ueda; Toshihiko Akasaka; Masahiko Kato; Toshihide Ogawa; Kazuhiro Yamamoto
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10.  [Cardiomyopathies and myocarditis].

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