Abstract

To prospectively evaluate breath-hold capability and patterns, coronary artery rest periods, and beta-blocker use in coronary magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Ethics committee approval and informed consent were obtained. In 210 consecutive patients (mean age, 61.8 years +/- 10.3 [standard deviation]; 146 men, 64 women), breath-hold patterns and maximal capability were assessed at expiration with dynamic navigator MR imaging (temporal resolution, 1 second). Left coronary artery (LCA) and right coronary artery (RCA) rest periods were determined at transverse cine imaging (steady-state free precession, retrospective gating, 40 phases per cycle). Before and after beta-blockade, rest periods were assessed in 25 additional patients (mean age, 61.4 years +/- 7.1; 20 men, five women). Differences were tested within groups with paired Student t test and between groups with unpaired Student t test (continuous variables) and chi(2) test (categoric variables). Pearson correlation was used to test the relationship between rest period and heart rate. Four distinct breath-hold patterns, characterized by diaphragmatic motion, were identified: pattern 1, steady plateau (55% of patients); 2, initial drift followed by plateau (12%); 3, continuous drift (19%); and 4, irregular, unsteady behavior (14%). Mean breath-hold capability with patterns 1 and 2 was 29 seconds +/- 13 (range, 10-64 seconds). The rest period of LCA was longer than that of RCA (163 msec +/- 75 vs 123 msec +/- 60; P < .01) and began earlier in the cardiac cycle (521 msec +/- 149 vs 540 msec +/- 160; P < .01); In a minority of patients, LCA rest period began later (21%) or was shorter (14%). With no pharmacologic intervention, correlation between rest period duration and heart rate was weak (LCA, r = -0.52; RCA, r = -0.38; P < .01). However, beta-blockade significantly lowered heart rate (61.3 beats/min +/- 7.2 vs 82.6 beats/min +/- 12.5, P < .001) and increased rest duration (LCA, 201.8 msec +/- 83.6 vs 111.8 msec +/- 44.55; RCA, 134.8 msec +/- 57.3 vs 83.1 msec +/- 35.8; P < .001). In 33% of patients (patterns 3 and 4), breath-hold pattern was unsuitable for high-spatial-resolution breath-hold MR imaging. LCA and RCA rest periods showed large variability in starting point and duration, with no correlation to heart rate.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call