Abstract

BackgroundWe hypothesised that myocardial deformation determined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) will detect myocardial scar.MethodsDisplacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) was used to calculate left ventricular strain in 125 patients (29 women and 96 men) with suspected coronary artery disease. The patients also underwent cine imaging and late gadolinium enhancement. 57 patients had a scar area >1 % in at least one segment, 23 were considered free from coronary artery disease (control group) and 45 had pathological findings but no scar (mixed group). Peak strain was calculated in eight combinations: radial and circumferential strain in transmural, subendocardial and epicardial layers derived from short axis acquisition, and transmural longitudinal and radial strain derived from long axis acquisitions. In addition, the difference between strain in affected segments and reference segments, “differential strain”, from the control group was analysed.ResultsIn receiver-operator-characteristic analysis for the detection of 50 % transmurality, circumferential strain performed best with area-under-curve (AUC) of 0.94. Using a cut-off value of -17 %, sensitivity was 95 % at a specificity of 80 %. AUC did not further improve with differential strain. There were significant differences between the control group and global strain circumferential direction (-17 % versus -12 %) and in the longitudinal direction (-13 % versus -10 %). Interobserver and scan-rescan reproducibility was high with an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) >0.93.ConclusionsDENSE-derived circumferential strain may be used for the detection of myocardial segments with >50 % scar area. The repeatability of strain is satisfactory. DENSE-derived global strain agrees with other global measures of left ventricular ejection fraction.

Highlights

  • We hypothesised that myocardial deformation determined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) will detect myocardial scar

  • Study population In total 125 patients were included in this study. 48 patients had a self-reported history of previous myocardial infarction (MI), 41 patients had undergone Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and 10 had received Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) surgery. 14 patients had had a myocardial infarction within 1 year, average time delay 179 days

  • There were no significant differences in age, gender or body mass index (BMI) between the groups

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Summary

Introduction

We hypothesised that myocardial deformation determined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) will detect myocardial scar. Deformation abnormalities of the left ventricular myocardium may have many causes e.g., myocardial scar, ischemia or electrical conduction delay. Abnormal deformation has been objectively identified by both cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and echocardiography. Myocardial tagging CMR [4] has been the gold standard in deformation imaging, but suffers from two main drawbacks: the analysis is time consuming and the tag lines fade over time which reduces the accuracy of the analysis [1]. Competing techniques such as Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE)

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