| Literature DB >> 31352898 |
David A Holdsworth1,2, Iain T Parsons1,3, Rebecca Chamley1,4, Joseph Britton1, Christopher Pavitt3, A John Baksi3, Stefan Neubauer2,5, Joanna d'Arcy1,2, Edward D Nicol6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The benefit of cardiovascular magnetic resonance Imaging (CMR) in assessing occupational risk is unknown. Pilots undergo frequent medical assessment for occult disease, which threatens incapacitation or distraction during flight. ECG and examination anomalies often lead to lengthy restriction, pending full investigation. CMR provides a sensitive, specific assessment of cardiac anatomy, tissue characterisation, perfusion defects and myocardial viability. We sought to determine if CMR, when added to standard care, would alter occupational outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Aviation medicine; Cardiomyopathy; Ectopy; Occupational; Risk
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31352898 PMCID: PMC6661777 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-019-0544-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Indication for CMR by frequency of referral
| Categorya | Subtype/Description | CMR clinical question |
|---|---|---|
| Ventricular ectopyb | > 2% ectopy on 24 h Holter ECG following the finding of ≥2 VEs on 12 lead ECG (25 mm/s) | ?cardiomyopathy/scar |
| > 2% ectopy on 24 h Holter ECG performed for other reason | ?cardiomyopathy/scar | |
| ECG appearances consistent with cardiomyopathy | Pathological TWI; LVH with marked strain pattern; bundle branch block | ?cardiomyopathy/scar |
| Structural changes on echo suggestive of possible cardiomyopathyc | Chamber dilatation and mild reduction in resting systolic function | ?cardiomyopathy/scar |
| Left or right ventricular hypertrophy/cardiomyopathy | ?cardiomyopathy/scar | |
| Chest pain | History of chest pain and elevated troponin, +/− ischaemic ECG changes | ?myocardial infarction/?pattern more consistent with myocarditis/?inducible ischaemia |
| ECG consistent with possible coronary artery disease | Q-waves, ST segment and T-wave changes, abnormal R-wave amplitude | ?myocardial infarction/?inducible ischaemia/?wall thinning/?RWMA/?ventricular aneurysm |
| Abnormal findings on exercise ECG stress test | ST changes; tachyarrhythmia; bundle branch block or other conduction abnormality; development of hypotension or failure to increase SBP | ?cardiomyopathy/scar/?inducible ischaemia |
| Coronary artery disease | Previously diagnosed | LV function/?RWMA/?myocardial infarction/inducible ischaemia and viability |
| Bicuspid aortic valve | Previously diagnosed | ?aortopathy; valve appearance/stenosis; |
| Other | Including: shortness of breath; pre-syncope; palpitations; family history of cardiomyopathy; CMR as part of cardiovascular work-up following another diagnosis - T2DM | ?cardiomyopathy/scar/?inducible ischaemia |
aSome individuals met more than one ‘indication category’ for CMR. Family history was a component of the total pre-test risk assessment of cardiovascular disease in several cases
bThis includes frequent isolated VEs and the finding of couplets, NSVT and ventricular bigeminy/trigeminy
cNSVT: non-sustained VT; TWI: T-wave inversion; LVH: left ventricular hypertrophy; RWMA: regional wall motion abnormality; SBP: systolic blood pressure
Abbreviations: NSVT Non-sustained VT, TWI T-Wave inversion, LVH Left ventricular hypertrophy, RWMA Regional wall motion abnormality, SBP systolic blood pressure
For fully formatted Table [see additional file 2]
Age and gender of referral groups
| Population | Number | Median age (interquartile range) | Male (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK military aircrew | ~ 8000 | 41 (28–52) | 95.9% |
| AMCS cardiovascular referrals | 558 | 46 (31–53) | 94.2% |
| AMCS referrals sent for CMR | 52 | 43 (33–50) | 96.2% |
| Normal CMR | 24 | 44 (33–51) | 92.0% |
| Pathological or indeterminate CMR | 28 | 43 (33.5–48) | 100.0% |
For fully formatted Table [see additional file 3]
Fig. 1Detailed effect of CMR scan on occupational disposal (see Additional file 1)
Occupational disposal of military aircrew before and after CMR scan
| Occupational disposal | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-CMR scan | Post-CMR scan | Change in disposal | |||
| Number | Proportion | Number | Proportion | ||
| Grounded | 26 | 50% | 6 | 11.5% | < 0.001 |
| Flying restriction | 26 | 50% | 27 | 52% | |
| Unrestricted flying | 0 | – | 19 | 36.5% | |
For fully formatted Table [see additional file 4]
The significance of change in occupational disposal before and after CMR was determined using a Chi-squared test. The terms ‘grounded’; ‘flying restriction’ and ‘unrestricted flying’, can be taken to be synonymous with ‘unable to work in role’; ‘able to work within trained role, with occupational restrictions’ and ‘unrestricted working’ for those in non-pilot roles
Occupational disposal by referral and diagnosis, showing the influence of CMR scan
– CMR chamber dimensions for military aircrew cohort
| Diagnosis | Mean Indexed LVEDV (ml/m2) | Mean Indexed LVESV (ml/m2) | LVEF % | Mean LV wall thicknessa (mm) | Mean Mass Index (g/m2) | Prevalence in aircrew populationb | Published prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal aircrew populationc | 82 | 29 | 66 | 82 | 65 | ||
| Normal men < 60 years old [ | 82 | 28 | 66 | – | 74 | ||
| Athletic / Cardiomyopathy | 102 | 40 | 61 | 101 | 82 | 0.05% | |
| Dilated Cardiomyopathy | 111 | 55 | 51 | 93 | 72 | 0.11% | 0.4% [ |
| Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy | 75 | 26 | 71 | 103 | 95 | 0.013% | 0.2% [ |
Mean LV volumes, ejection fraction, wall thickness and mass index for cardiomyopathy diagnoses in comparison to normal scans
aMean wall thickness calculated from mean of anterior, lateral, inferior and septal walls at basal, mid and apical levels
bPopulation at risk (PAR) defined as all aircrew (n = 8000) PAR defined as all aircrew (n ≈ 8000),
cData are taken from the current study cohort found to be normal on CMR
For fully formatted Table [see additional file 5]