AI Article Synopsis

  • Gelsolin (AGel) amyloidosis is a hereditary disorder that primarily affects the nervous system, and this study aimed to explore its impact on the heart, specifically looking for local myocardial effects and amyloid buildup.
  • A study with 50 AGel amyloidosis patients used advanced imaging techniques to measure various heart metrics, revealing that these patients had significant impairment in left ventricular (LV) functions and abnormal T1 values indicating amyloid accumulation in the heart tissues.
  • Findings showed that the highest T1 values and extracellular volume (ECV) were in the basal region of the LV, with considerable correlation between ECV, native T1 values, and impaired LV longitudinal strain, highlighting the localized nature of myocardial involvement in this condition.

Article Abstract

Gelsolin (AGel) amyloidosis is a hereditary condition with common neurological effects. Myocardial involvement, especially strain, T1, or extracellular volume (ECV), in this disease has not been investigated before. Local myocardial effects and possible amyloid accumulation were the targets of interest in this study. Fifty patients with AGel amyloidosis were enrolled in the study. All patients underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging, including cine imaging, T1 mapping, tagging, and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging at 1.5 T. Results for volumetry, myocardial feature-tracking strain, rotation, torsion, native T1, ECV, and LGE were investigated. The population mean native T1 values in different segments of the left ventricle (LV) varied between 1003 and 1080 ms. Myocardial mean T1 was 1031 ± 37 ms. T1 was highest in the basal plane of the LV (1055 ± 40 ms), similarly to ECV (30.0% ± 4.4%). ECV correlated with native T1 in all LV segments (p < 0.005). Basal LGE was detected in 76% of patients, and mid-ventricular LGE in 32%. LV longitudinal strain was impaired (- 17.4% ± 2.6%), significantly decreasing apical rotation (p = 0.018) and concurrently myocardial torsion (p = 0.005). LV longitudinal strain correlated with mean T1 and ECV of different LV planes (p < 0.04; basal p < 0.01). Myocardial involvement in AGel amyloidosis is significant, but the effects are local, focusing on the basal plane of the LV.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6428907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10554-019-01570-4DOI Listing

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