We sought to evaluate the prognostic role of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in patients with definite, borderline and possible diagnosis of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) as defined by the International Task Force (TF) in 2010. CMR was performed in 175 patients: 52 with definite, 50 with borderline and 73 possible ARVC. Abnormal-CMR was defined as the presence of ≥1 CMR abnormalities (including abnormalities of right ventricular and left ventricular wall motion, fat infiltration, late gadolinium enhancement, dilation and dysfunction of either ventricles).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To evaluate the geometric and dosimetric accuracies of the CyberKnife Synchrony respiratory tracking system (RTS) and to validate a method for pretreatment patient-specific delivery quality assurance (DQA).
Methods: An EasyCube phantom was mounted on the ExacTrac gating phantom, which can move along the superior-inferior (SI) axis of a patient to simulate a moving target. The authors compared dynamic and static measurements.
Background: Isolated left ventricular diverticulum, a rare cardiac malformation, can be asymptomatic or associated with systemic embolization, ventricular arrhythmias, or sudden death. MRI allows for the detection of diverticuli and the distinction between fibrous and muscular types using the delayed enhancement technique.
Aim: To evaluate the prevalence of left ventricular diverticuli in nonselected consecutive patients who had undergone MRI.
Purpose: In steady state free precession (SSFP) images acquired with a repetition time/echo time (TR/TE) ≈ 2, fat is surrounded by a black boundary, called "India Ink" artifact. Indian Ink artifact may improve detection of intramyocardial fat. Aims of this study were: (i) to assess the accuracy of SSFP technique for the detection of fat metaplasia in remote myocardial infarction (RMI); (ii) to evaluate the inter- and intraobserver reproducibility for the quantification of intramyocardial fat using SSFP and fast spin echo/short TI inversion recovery (FSE/STIR) techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: This study sought to assess the rate of progression of fibrosis by 2 consecutive cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) examinations and its relation with clinical variables.
Background: In hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) myocardial fibrosis, detected by late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), is associated to a progressive ventricular dysfunction and worse prognosis.
Methods: A total of 55 HCM patients (37 males; mean age 43 ± 18 years) underwent 2 CMR examinations (CMR-1 and CMR-2) separated by an interval of 719 ± 410 days.