Abstract

BackgroundCardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is playing an expanding role in the assessment of patients with heart failure (HF). The assessment of myocardial perfusion status in HF can be challenging due to left ventricular (LV) remodelling and wall thinning, coexistent scar and respiratory artefacts. The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of quantitative CMR myocardial perfusion analysis in patients with HF.MethodsA group of 58 patients with heart failure (HF; left ventricular ejection fraction, LVEF ≤ 50%) and 33 patients with normal LVEF (LVEF >50%), referred for suspected coronary artery disease, were studied. All subjects underwent quantitative first-pass stress perfusion imaging using adenosine according to standard acquisition protocols. The feasibility of quantitative perfusion analysis was then assessed using high-resolution, 3 T kt perfusion and voxel-wise Fermi deconvolution.Results30/58 (52%) subjects in the HF group had underlying ischaemic aetiology. Perfusion abnormalities were seen amongst patients with ischaemic HF and patients with normal LV function. No regional perfusion defect was observed in the non-ischaemic HF group. Good agreement was found between visual and quantitative analysis across all groups. Absolute stress perfusion rate, myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR) and endocardial-epicardial MPR ratio identified areas with abnormal perfusion in the ischaemic HF group (p = 0.02; p = 0.04; p = 0.02, respectively). In the Normal LV group, MPR and endocardial-epicardial MPR ratio were able to distinguish between normal and abnormal segments (p = 0.04; p = 0.02 respectively). No significant differences of absolute stress perfusion rate or MPR were observed comparing visually normal segments amongst groups.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate the feasibility of high-resolution voxel-wise perfusion assessment in patients with HF.

Highlights

  • Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is playing an expanding role in the assessment of patients with heart failure (HF)

  • Patients were retrospectively classified on the basis of the aetiology of HF as ischaemic (LVEF < 50% with scar arising from the subendocardium or transmural in a location corresponding to a coronary territory) or non-ischaemic (LVEF < 50%, either no scar or mid-myocardial or epicardial scar with invasive coronary angiogram confirming unobstructed epicardial coronary arteries) [13]

  • In the HF group, 30 patients (51.7%) had a final diagnosis of ischaemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) and the remaining 28 subjects had a final diagnosis of non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy (NICM)

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is playing an expanding role in the assessment of patients with heart failure (HF). Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has established itself as an important component to the assessment and management of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) and HF [7,8]. 3 Tesla (3 T) kt CMR perfusion enables high spatial resolution perfusion assessment and provides data suitable for voxel-wise quantitative analysis [14,15]. The availability of combined methods for high-resolution imaging and voxel-wise quantitative assessment may enable the use of perfusion CMR to assess myocardial perfusion status in patients with dilated and remodelled ventricles, the evidence for this is lacking. The aim of this study was to test the feasibility of 3 T kt high-resolution and voxel-wise quantitative perfusion CMR in this subgroup of patients

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