| Literature DB >> 29703741 |
Andrew Apps1, Justin Lau2, Mark Peterzan1, Stefan Neubauer1, Damian Tyler2, Oliver Rider1.
Abstract
Although non-invasive perfusion and viability imaging often provide the gateway to coronary revascularisation, current non-invasive imaging methods only report the surrogate markers of inducible hypoperfusion and presence or absence of myocardial scar, rather than actually visualising areas of ischaemia and/or viable myocardium. This may lead to suboptimal revascularisation decisions. Normally respiring (viable) cardiomyocytes convert pyruvate to acetyl-CoA and CO2/bicarbonate (via pyruvate dehydrogenase), but under ischaemic conditions characteristically shift this conversion to lactate (by lactate dehydrogenase). Imaging pyruvate metabolism thus has the potential to improve upon current imaging techniques. Using the novel hyperpolarisation technique of dynamic nuclear polarisation (DNP), the magnetic resonance signal of injected [1-13C]pyruvate can be transiently magnified >10 000 times over that seen in conventional MR spectroscopy, allowing the characteristic metabolic signatures of ischaemia (lactate production) and viability (CO2/bicarbonate production) to be directly imaged. As such DNP imaging of the downstream metabolism of [1-13C]pyruvate could surpass the diagnostic capabilities of contemporary ischaemia and viability testing. Here we review the technique, and with brief reference to the salient biochemistry, discuss its potential applications within cardiology. These include ischaemia and viability testing, and further characterisation of the altered metabolism seen at different stages during the natural history of heart failure. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging; coronary artery disease
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29703741 PMCID: PMC6161668 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2017-312356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart ISSN: 1355-6037 Impact factor: 5.994
Potential cardiac applications of hyperpolarised magnetic resonance technology
| Potential cardiac application | Biochemical basis | Strengths | Weaknesses | Alternative approaches |
| Ischaemia testing in coronary artery disease | Hypoxia curtails Krebs cycle flux. Pyruvate metabolism switches from PDH to LDH—resulting [1- 13C]lactate can be imaged. | By imaging [1-13C]lactate, the technique can measure the biochemical hallmark of ischaemia, not a surrogate marker. | Sensitivity for low-grade ischaemia is yet to be seen; the models studied are reperfusion models. Extra – cardiac [1-13C]lactate makes cardiac imaging difficult. | Conventional functional ischaemia testing: |
| Viability testing in coronary artery disease | Viable myocardium must be respiring with flux through PDH. The CO2 produced equilibrates with HCO3−. H13CO3− production therefore defines viable myocardium. | Unlike LGE, detection of H13CO3− delineates alive tissue with potential for recovery, potentially refining the group revascularised. | Resolution – human cardiac imaging down to 8.8 × 8.8 × 10 mm is demonstrated. Reasonable SNR at higher resolution requires further technical development. This compares with 1.4 × 1.6 × 5 mm resolution for LGE. | Conventional testing: |
| Heart failure (general considerations) | Energy substrate handling changes with stepwise progression towards heart failure, initially with increased glucose usage. PDH in part regulates the balance between fatty acid and glucose metabolism. | Serial 13C imaging and metabolic phenotyping of energy substrates in those at risk of developing heart failure may inform risk stratification and treatment regimens. | Identification of shifts in substrate handling may simply reflect progression of heart failure and may not represent an opportunity for an intervention that alters progression. | None comparable. Contemporary strategies of serial structural imaging with various modalities simply reports function only. |
| Heart failure (defining the aetiology) | Insulin resistance and raised circulating fatty acids result in markedly reduced glucose oxidative ability in diabetic cardiomyopathy. Metabolic phenotyping may inform diagnosis in the failing heart. | Characterising the metabolic hallmarks of cardiomyopathy may aid diagnosis in circumstances such as unexplained hypertrophy (HCM vs hypertensive vs storage disorders), and identify | As for heart failure – general considerations. | As yet metabolic phenotyping has not yet reached the clinic in this circumstance, however, 13C imaging would be a helpful adjunct to current imaging modalities. |
| DNP – the technique, compared with other metabolic imaging modalities | The magnetic energy (polarisation) and hence MR signal of the 13C tracer is increased up to 10 000 times. Achieved by transferring the high polarisation associated with free electrons at very low temperature by microwave irradiation. | Allows in vivo real-time imaging of normal and abnormal metabolism, and the study of how this contributes to the disease phenotype. | (1) Technically challenging: dissolution from 1K, pH neutralisation and radical removal must happen extremely fast for signal. | Other metabolic imaging: |
*Single photon emission computed tomography – myocardial perfusion imaging.
†Instantaneous wave free ratio – hyperaemia free intracoronary functional assessment.
CMR - Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance; DNP, dynamic nuclear polarisation; DSE, Dobutamine stress echocardiography; FFR, Fractional flow reserve; iFR, instantaneous wave-free ratio - hyperaemia free intra-coronary functional assessment; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; MRS, Magnetic resonance spectroscopy; PDH, pyruvate dehydrogenase; PET, Positron emission tomography; SPECT - MPI - Single photon emission computed tomography.
Figure 1Different metabolic reactions can be studied according to the position of the 13C label in pyruvate. In the C1 position (blue), during aerobic respiration HCO3 offers a measure of flux through PDH and hence aerobic respiration. Its production can thus be used to define viable (living) myocardium. In ischaemic conditions lactate production is seen. In the C2 position (red) the 13C label is passed directly to acetyl-CoA and into the Krebs cycle. Krebs cycle flux can be measured via the spectra of the intermediate metabolites. PDH, pyruvate dehydrogenase.
Figure 2Dynamic nuclear hyperpolarisation theory: in a magnetic field, nuclei behave like bar magnets aligning with or against the applied field. The tiny difference in these two populations at thermal equilibrium produces a small MR signal (polarisation of 0.0005%). DNP magnifies the difference in these two populations and hence the MR signal >10 000 fold. This is achieved by mixing the 13C containing nuclei with a source of free electrons (a radical) at very low temperature (~1 Kelvin). At these low temperatures, free radical polarisation reaches 100%, and microwaves are used to transfer this electron polarisation to the nuclear spins. Dissolution is rapid to ensure the signal is maintained long enough to allow injection into the patient and in vivo metabolism to be observed.
Figure 3Short axis imaging after 60 min left anterior descending artery (LAD) occlusion in pigs, at baseline and 1 week postreperfusion. Colour intensity is normalised to pyruvate seen in the left ventricle (LV) cavity, stunned myocardium (shown on the left) demonstrated normalisation of HCO3-, absence of delayed enhancement and normalisation of function at 1 week. In infarcted myocardium (right) HCO3- production remained absent at 1 week, lactate was only seen in the peri-infarct region (arrow) and delayed enhancement clearly delineates infarction. (Reproduced with permission Magn Reson Med Apr;69:1063–71.
Figure 413C images in a midventricular slice from two healthy human volunteers (A and B, D and E). [1–13C]pyruvate is most clearly seen in the blood pool within the right and left ventricles (A and D). H13CO3- signal is mostly seen within the LV myocardium. (Reproduced with permission Circ Res 2016;119:1177–1182).