AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates the potential for cardiac diffusion tensor imaging (cDTI) to detect intramyocardial hemorrhage (IMH) after ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), which is important for patient prognosis.
  • - A total of 50 patients were examined at one week and three months post-STEMI, using various imaging techniques including T2* mapping, which is the standard for identifying IMH.
  • - Results showed that cDTI effectively identified IMH, with the presence of hypointense signals matching IMH areas found on T2* maps, and significant differences in mean diffusivity and fractional anisotropy values, indicating altered myocardial architecture due to IMH.

Article Abstract

Background: Intramyocardial hemorrhage (IMH) following ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is associated with poor prognosis. In cardiac magnetic resonance (MR), T2* mapping is the reference standard for detecting IMH while cardiac diffusion tensor imaging (cDTI) can characterize myocardial architecture via fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) of water molecules. The value of cDTI in the detection of IMH is not currently known.

Hypothesis: cDTI can detect IMH post-STEMI.

Study Type: Prospective.

Subjects: A total of 50 patients (20% female) scanned at 1-week (V1) and 3-month (V2) post-STEMI.

Field Strength/sequence: A 3.0 T; inversion-recovery T1-weighted-imaging, multigradient-echo T2* mapping, spin-echo cDTI.

Assessment: T2* maps were analyzed to detect IMH (defined as areas with T2* < 20 msec within areas of infarction). cDTI images were co-registered to produce averaged diffusion-weighted-images (DWIs), MD, and FA maps; hypointense areas were manually planimetered for IMH quantification.

Statistics: On averaged DWI, the presence of hypointense signal in areas matching IMH on T2* maps constituted to true-positive detection of iron. Independent samples t-tests were used to compare regional cDTI values. Results were considered statistically significant at P ≤ 0.05.

Results: At V1, 24 patients had IMH on T2*. On averaged DWI, all 24 patients had hypointense signal in matching areas. IMH size derived using averaged-DWI was nonsignificantly greater than from T2* (2.0 ± 1.0 cm vs 1.89 ± 0.96 cm , P = 0.69). Compared to surrounding infarcted myocardium, MD was significantly reduced (1.29 ± 0.20 × 10  mm /sec vs 1.75 ± 0.16 × 10  mm /sec) and FA was significantly increased (0.40 ± 0.07 vs 0.23 ± 0.03) within areas of IMH. By V2, all 24 patients with acute IMH continued to have hypointense signals on averaged-DWI in the affected area. T2* detected IMH in 96% of these patients. Overall, averaged-DWI had 100% sensitivity and 96% specificity for the detection of IMH.

Data Conclusion: This study demonstrates that the parameters MD and FA are susceptible to the paramagnetic properties of iron, enabling cDTI to detect IMH.

Evidence Level: 1 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 2.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9544509PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jmri.28063DOI Listing

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