Literature DB >> 7741997

Imaging of the heart by MRI and PET.

J Hartiala1, J Knuuti.   

Abstract

This review article describes the clinical usefulness and future potential of two new methods for the imaging of the heart, which have recently also become available outside research laboratories. These methods are magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET). MRI is the most rapidly increasing imaging modality in medicine today. The moving heart forms a challenge to conventionally rather slow MRI-techniques. Techniques based on ECG-gating have been mandatory in making cardiac cine-MRI possible. Even though MRI provides accurate and quantitative information of the heart, conventional methods are time-consuming, confined to special laboratories, and rather expensive. Therefore, the clinical use of cardiac MRI is, in many laboratories, limited to cases in which echocardiography does not provide adequate information (e.g. pulmonary circulation) or when the patient is not willing to have transoesophageal echocardiography for better visibility. MRI is also used instead of or to complement invasive angiography to study large vessels, and it provides excellent information on paracardiac masses. Cardiac MRI is developing rapidly and within the next few years it is likely to have a profound impact on cardiac imaging. This is based on its noninvasive nature and on the comprehensive anatomic (including coronary arteries), functional, flow, perfusion and possibly also metabolic information it has the potential to provide in a manner not comparable to any other imaging method. PET is a nuclear medicine imaging modality that allows quantitative characterization of a variety of physiological and metabolic processes in vivo. Using positron-emitting flow tracers and analogues of metabolic substrates, regional myocardial blood flow, glucose and fatty acid metabolism and oxygen consumption can be studied noninvasively by PET in research as well as in clinical practice. For example, regional myocardial glucose utilization rates can be measured accurately by PET. This allows us to study the effects of nutritional interventions, hormonal and neural effects as well as disease processes on the glucose utilization of the human heart. PET is currently the only technique that permits noninvasive quantification of regional myocardial perfusion in absolute terms. Over the last decade, PET has also emerged as a clinically useful tool to study coronary artery disease and myocardial viability.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7741997     DOI: 10.3109/07853899509031934

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Med        ISSN: 0785-3890            Impact factor:   4.709


  6 in total

Review 1.  Breathhold cardiac MRI and MRA.

Authors:  G G Hartnell
Journal:  Int J Card Imaging       Date:  1999-04

2.  MRI imaging of a left atrial mass misinterpreted by transesophageal echocardiography.

Authors:  E Cohen; R Paz; R Yortner; A Sagie; I Russo; M Garty
Journal:  Int J Card Imaging       Date:  1998-04

3.  Quantitative cardiac perfusion: a noninvasive spin-labeling method that exploits coronary vessel geometry.

Authors:  S B Reeder; M K Atalay; E R McVeigh; E A Zerhouni; J R Forder
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 11.105

4.  Simultaneous noninvasive determination of regional myocardial perfusion and oxygen content in rabbits: toward direct measurement of myocardial oxygen consumption at MR imaging.

Authors:  S B Reeder; A A Holmes; E R McVeigh; J R Forder
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 11.105

5.  It's Not What You Take Up, It's What You Keep: How Discoveries from Diverse Disciplines Directed the Development of the FDG PET/CT Scan.

Authors:  Jonathan D Kaunitz; Mark Mandelkern; Joanna S Fowler
Journal:  Dig Dis Sci       Date:  2022-07-30       Impact factor: 3.487

6.  Myocardial perfusion quantitation with 15O-labelled water PET: high reproducibility of the new cardiac analysis software (Carimas).

Authors:  Sergey V Nesterov; Chunlei Han; Maija Mäki; Sami Kajander; Alexandru G Naum; Hans Helenius; Irina Lisinen; Heikki Ukkonen; Mikko Pietilä; Esa Joutsiniemi; Juhani Knuuti
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2009-04-30       Impact factor: 9.236

  6 in total

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