| Literature DB >> 23272658 |
Nicole M Bhave1, Benjamin H Freed, Chattanong Yodwut, Denise Kolanczyk, Karin Dill, Roberto M Lang, Victor Mor-Avi, Amit R Patel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adenosine cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can accurately quantify myocardial perfusion reserve. While regadenoson is increasingly employed due to ease of use, imaging protocols have not been standardized. We sought to determine the optimal regadenoson CMR protocol for quantifying myocardial perfusion reserve index (MPRi) - more specifically, whether regadenoson stress imaging should be performed before or after rest imaging.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23272658 PMCID: PMC3552720 DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-14-89
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Figure 1CMR protocol. Perfusion imaging sequences are separated by 15-min intervals as shown.
Figure 2A. Example of myocardial tracing and segmentation in a short-axis slice. Endocardial border is shown in green and epicardial border in yellow. The LV myocardium was segmented into 4 sectors (anterior, lateral, inferior, septal). B. Blood pool and segmental myocardial time-intensity curves. Maximum up-slopes (black lines) were determined for the blood pool and for each myocardial segment; the mean myocardial up-slope was then normalized to the blood pool up-slope.
Patient demographics and hemodynamic responses to regadenoson
| 32 (7) | 32 (13) | 0.90 | |
| 70 | 50 | 0.65 | |
| 70 | 50 | 0.65 | |
| 61 (5) | 61 (5) | 0.97 | |
| 85 (9) | 84 (14) | 0.89 | |
| 68 (9) | 65 (14) | 0.67 | |
| +55 (11) | +48 (13) | 0.22 | |
| −48 (11) | −35 (12) | 0.03 | |
| +7 (9) | +13 (12) | 0.24 | |
| 77 (11) | 78 (12) | 0.75 | |
| +3 (10) | +4 (7) | 0.81 |
SD, standard deviation; LVEF, left ventricular ejection fraction; LVEDV, left ventricular end-diastolic volume; HR, heart rate; BPM, beats per minute; MAP, mean arterial pressure. Data in parentheses are standard deviations.
Regadenoson CMR perfusion up-slopes at rest, stress, and recovery, with and without aminophylline
| 8.79 (2.98) | 15.99 (8.38) | 14.08 (4.03) | <0.001 | 0.64 | |
| 7.73 (1.64) | 13.01 (2.53) | 10.19 (2.98) | 0.02 | 0.08 |
Data in parentheses are standard deviations.
Figure 3Comparison of perfusion up-slopes at stress and recovery, normalized for rest up-slope, on a per-patient basis. Four subjects in the aminophylline group and 3 subjects in the no-aminophylline group had greater perfusion at recovery than at stress. * P < 0.001; † P = 0.08; **P = 0.02; ‡ P = 0.01; ʃ P = 0.38
Comparison of aminophylline and no-aminophylline groups with respect to perfusion reserve
| 1.83 (0.73) | 1.13 (0.38) | 36 | 0.001 | |
| 1.73 (0.43) | 1.40 (0.35) | 20 | 0.04 |
MPRi-rest, myocardial perfusion reserve index comparing stress to rest; MPRi-recov, myocardial perfusion reserve index comparing stress to recovery. Data in parentheses are standard deviations.