| Literature DB >> 31649047 |
Rong Bing1, Marc Richard Dweck2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging; myocardial disease
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31649047 PMCID: PMC6900237 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2019-315560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart ISSN: 1355-6037 Impact factor: 5.994
Typical CMR fibrosis findings in common pathologies
| LGE | T1 mapping | |
| Ischaemic cardiomyopathy |
Subendocardial involvement Variable transmural extension Coronary artery territory distribution |
Quantitative native T1 may perform similarly to LGE for detecting chronic infarction ECV and native T1 in non-infarcted myocardium appear to be elevated |
| DCM |
Non-ischaemic distribution, often mid-wall/subepicardial |
ECV and native T1 may be elevated |
| Aortic stenosis |
Typically non-ischaemic mid-wall distribution May have subendocardial involvement |
ECV, iECV and native T1 may be elevated Post-AVR findings vary depending on relative regression of cellular and extracellular constituents of myocardium. |
| Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy |
Patchy non-ischaemic distribution in regions of focal wall thickening, or at the right ventricular insertion points in the septum |
ECV and native T1 may be elevated, even in patients without LGE |
| Myocarditis |
At least one focal lesion in non-ischaemic distribution; often inferolateral and subepicardial Used in conjunction with T2 mapping and early gadolinium enhancement for oedema and hyperaemia |
Native T1 may offer greater diagnostic accuracy in myocarditis than LGE and traditional Lake Louise criteria Not specific for acute vs chronic myocarditis |
| Cardiac amyloidosis |
Diffuse myocardial uptake Difficult to null images —black blood pool rather than white |
ECV and native T1 elevated and may quantify disease burden |
| Cardiac sarcoidosis |
Non-specific appearances Multi-focal, non-ischaemic distribution is suggestive |
Native T1 may discriminate sarcoidosis from healthy controls Regresses with anti-inflammatory therapy |
AVR, aortic valve replacement; CMR, cardiovascular magnetic resonance; DCM, dilated cardiomyopathy; iECV, indexed extracellular volume; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement.
Figure 1T1 mapping in cardiovascular magnetic resonance modified Look-Locker inversion recovery sequence. A sequence of three inversion recovery experiments are performed with images acquired and ordered according to inversion times. Signals are then used to plot a T1 recovery curve. The T1 value is the time when T1 recovery is 63% complete. T1 values are then used to create a voxel map. Adapted from Everett et al.58
Figure 2Ischaemic cardiomyopathy extensive anteroseptal myocardial infarction. Two-chamber (left) and short-axis (right) views demonstrate transmural late gadolinium enhancement in the left anterior descending artery territory with associated wall thinning, suggesting no viability.
Figure 3Non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy. Four-chamber (left) and short-axis (right) views demonstrate anteroseptal and inferoseptal late gadolinium enhancement in a typical non-ischaemic (mid-wall) distribution. Note sparing of the subendocardium.
Figure 4Aortic stenosis myocardial fibrosis in aortic stenosis. There is non-ischaemic late gadolinium enhancement in the basal inferolateral and inferior wall, where the subendocardium is spared (red arrow).
Figure 5Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy examples of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with typical septal hypertrophy (right) and an apical variant (left). Patchy non-infarct late gadolinium enhancement is seen within the regions of wall thickening.
Figure 6Myocarditis. Three-chamber (left) and short-axis (right) examples of patchy, non-infarct, mid-wall late gadolinium enhancement in the anterolateral and inferolateral walls of a patient with chronic myocarditis (3 months after the onset of symptoms). Note that these findings are non-specific.
Figure 7Cardiac amyloidosis and sarcoidosis. Left: cardiac amyloidosis. Note the black blood pool and diffuse late gadolinium enhancement within the abnormal myocardium. Right: cardiac sarcoidosis. The distribution of late gadolinium enhancement in cardiac sarcoidosis is variable. Here, there is a large burden of confluent enhancement in the inferior and inferolateral wall.