Abstract
To assess the feasibility of and characterize the new paramagnetic contrast agent gadolinium-BOPTA/dimeglumine (Gd-BOPTA) to detect acute myocardial infarctions with MR imaging, 24 patients (53.3 +/- 8.3 yr) were examined 9.3 +/- 3.6 days after a first myocardial infarction. Short-axis T1-weighted and T2-weighted MR imaging was performed at three slice levels. T1-weighted images were obtained before, immediately after, 15, 30, and 45 min after injection. Patients received either 0.05 or 0.1 mmol/kg body weight Gd-BOPTA. Images were qualitatively and quantitatively analyzed. Two patients showed no signs of infarction on T2-weighted images as opposed to contrast-enhanced T1-weighted images. Contrast-to-noise ratio was not affected by the dosage level. Signal intensity (SI) of normal to infarcted myocardium was significantly improved by both dosages (p < .0005) but a dosage of 0.05 mmol/kg produced significantly higher SI inf/norm (1.42 +/- 0.07 vs. 1.34 +/- 0.06, respectively, p = .015). SI of normal and infarcted myocardium enhanced immediately after administration of 0.05 mmol/kg (29.3 +/- 5.1% and 53.8 +/- 9.6% respectively), which decreased thereafter to 5.3 +/- 4.8% and 40.2 +/- 8.5% respectively, at 45 min (p < .002 for normal myocardium). SI enhancement immediately after 0.1 mmol/kg Gd-BOPTA showed no decrease within the first 45 min. Gd-BOPTA enables the detection of myocardial infarction. Optimal infarct delineation is achieved from 15 to 45 min after administration of 0.05 mmol/kg body weight Gd-BOPTA. Gd-BOPTA at 0.05 mmol/kg does improve image quality as measured by contrast-to-noise ratio and SI enhancement as compared to 0.10 mmol/kg.
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