AI Article Synopsis

  • Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) can result from various causes, including acute reversible myocardial injury or chronic irreversible damage, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is useful in identifying cases of acute myocardial edema (ME).
  • In a study involving 101 SCA survivors who had early MRI and received implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), 18% showed evidence of ME, and various underlying heart issues contributed to their arrhythmic events.
  • ME was linked to better long-term outcomes, indicating that patients with ME had lower rates of ICD interventions and shocks, suggesting that recognizing ME early could shape future management guidelines for SCA survivors.

Article Abstract

Background Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) may be caused by an acute and reversible myocardial injury, a chronic and irreversible myocardial damage, or a primary ventricular arrhythmia. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging may identify myocardial edema (ME), which denotes acute and reversible myocardial damage. We evaluated the arrhythmic outcome of SCA survivors during follow-up and tested the prognostic role of ME. Methods and Results We included a consecutive series of 101 (71% men, median age 47 years) SCA survivors from 9 collaborative centers who underwent early (<1 month) cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and received an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). On T2-weighted sequences, ME was found in 18 of 101 (18%) patients. According to cardiac magnetic resonance imaging findings, the arrhythmic SCA was ascribed to acute myocardial injury (either ischemic [n=10] or inflammatory [n=8]), to chronic structural heart diseases (ischemic heart disease [n=11], cardiomyopathy [n=20], or other [n=23]), or to primarily arrhythmic syndrome (n=29). During a follow-up of 47 months (28 to 67 months), 24 of 101 (24%) patients received an appropriate ICD intervention. ME was associated with a significantly higher survival free from both any ICD interventions (log-rank=0.04) and ICD shocks (log-rank=0.03) and remained an independent predictor of better arrhythmic outcome after adjustment for left ventricular ejection fraction and late gadolinium enhancement. The risk of appropriate ICD intervention was unrelated to the type of underlying heart disease. Conclusions ME on early cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, which denotes an acute and transient arrhythmogenic substrate, predicted a favorable long-term arrhythmic outcome of SCA survivors. These findings may have a substantial impact on future guidelines on the management of SCA survivors.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8751964PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.121.021861DOI Listing

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