| Literature DB >> 25057389 |
Anne E Eyler1, Farhaan A Ahmad2, Eiman Jahangir2.
Abstract
Through the detection of acute inflammation, edema, and fibrosis, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging provides a complete and safe evaluation of the myocardium in Churg-Strauss disease and is a useful tool for following the disease course.Entities:
Keywords: Churg-Strauss; cardiac magnetic; cardiovascular disease; resonance imaging; rheumatologic disease
Year: 2014 PMID: 25057389 PMCID: PMC4012667 DOI: 10.1177/2054270414525370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JRSM Open ISSN: 2054-2704
Figure 1.Baseline cardiac MRI with myocardial edema and fibrosis and follow-up cardiac MRI with persistent fibrosis. Baseline cardiac MRI: (a) Short-axis T2-weighted view of the mid-left ventricle at the level of the papillary muscles; (b) short-axis dark blood T2-weighted fast spin echo images through the mid left ventricle revealing hyperintense signal (white arrow) consistent with myocardial edema; (c) short-axis phase-sensitive T1-weighted (PSIR) images of the mid-left ventricle revealing myocardial delayed enhancement (white arrow) of the same region; (d) two-chamber PSIR images with fibrosis (white arrow). Follow-up cardiac MRI: (e) Short-axis T2-weighted view of the mid left ventricle at the level of the papillary muscles; (f) Short-axis dark blood T2-weighted fast spin echo images through the mid-left ventricle with resolution of myocardial edema; (g) short-axis PSIR images of the mid left ventricle with persistent fibrosis (white arrow); (h) two-chamber PSIR images with fibrosis (white arrows). (Images courtesy of Mark Lawson, MD, Director of Cardiac MRI Lab, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN.) MRI = magnetic resonance imaging; PSIR = phase-sensitive T1-weighted.