Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess the relationship between left ventricular (LV) regional myocardial wall motion abnormality (WMA), revealed by visual interpretation of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) cine images together with the computed wall motion parametric image, and the transmural scar extent, as assessed by Late gadolinium Enhancement (LGE), in 40 patients. Each cine CMR short-axis loop was processed to compute a parametric image where each pixel represents the amplitude of the Hilbert transform of videointensity over time. Two expert radiologists blindly interpreted the cine CMR images in combination with the corresponding parametric image to assign a WMA score for each of the 16 myocardial sectors in which the LV myocardium was subdivided. Such score was compared per sector to the level of transmural scar extent obtained by LGE images.A total of 592 myocardial segments were analyzed. A significant decrease in regional wall motion was observed in sectors with LGE transmural hyperenhancement > 75% of tissue, as well as a correlation between parametric image amplitude and peak radial and circumferential strain, computed by feature tracking. The results showed a reduction in prediction error Lambda of WMA from LGE of 65%, and of LGE from WMA of 63%. In particular, the estimated probability of correct prediction of WMA from LGE was 76%, while that of LGE from WMA was 75%.The interpretation of myocardial viability by LGE images combined with the WMA information, derived from cine CMR and parametric images, could improve the clinical decision making process.

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