Aim of the study was to assess perfusion defect and viability of the myocardium by the method of multispiral computed tomography (MSCT) in patients with ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and to assess their prognostic role in development of remodeling of the left ventricle (LV). We included into the study 117 patients with AMI. MSCT with intravenous contrast enhancement was carried out on days 3-4 and at 12 months after AMI. In the arterial phase we estimated volume of myocardial perfusion defect, LV end diastolic and end systolic volumes (LVEDV and LVESV), and LV ejection fraction (EF). Three types of myocardial opacification were distinguished on tomograms in delayed phase of MSCT: type I - subendocardial residual defect (RD), type II - transmural RD, type III - transmural delayed hyper enhancement (DE). Patients were divided in 3 groups: (1) with subendocardial RD (n=63), (2) with transmural RD (n=28), (3) with transmural DE (n=26). Development of LV remodeling was registered if at repeat MSCT LVEDV increased more or equal 20% from baseline. In patients with signs of viable myocardium (group 1) volume of perfusion defect was substantially smaller than in patients with nonviable myocardium (groups 2 and 3): 1cm3 (0.4-2.4) vs. 7.3 cm3 (5.3-10.0) and 6.3 cm3 (5.0-15.0), respectively, p<0.001. Compared with groups 2 and 3 patients of group 1 more often were female (p=0.04), had inferior MI (p<0.001), and spontaneous reperfusion (p<0.001). After 12 months LV remodeling was registered in 19.3% of patients, all had signs of nonviable myocardium in more or equal 3 LV segments. In patients with perfusion defect more or equal 10 cm3 probability of development of LV remodeling exceeded 50%. Disturbances of perfusion abnormalities and number of nonviable LV segments were main predictors of LV remodeling.

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