Abstract

Impaired cardiac fatty acid uptake, assessed by the radiolabelled fatty acid analogue beta-methyl-p-iodophenyl pentadecanoic acid (I-123-BMIPP), is observed in the myocardium following acute ischaemic events, but the long-term prognostic implication has not been established. This study aimed to determine the prognostic value of cardiac BMIPP uptake in patients with acute myocardial infarction. Following the assessment of thallium-201 and I-123-BMIPP uptake, 101 post-infarct patients were prospectively followed up with primary end points of cardiac death, heart failure and non-fatal infarction. During a mean follow-up of 28 months, three cardiac deaths, three non-fatal infarctions, 23 revascularizations and four recurrences of angina pectoris were observed. Multivariate analysis identified reduced uptake of BMIPP and perfusion, no beta-blocking treatment and greater thallium-BMIPP mismatch (i.e. larger BMIPP defect than thallium defect) as significant predictors for overall cardiac events. Prior myocardial infarction, reduced left ventricular ejection fraction and greater thallium-BMIPP mismatch were selected as independent predictors of harder cardiac events. Female patients, those with greater BMIPP defect or greater thallium-BMIPP mismatch showed worse clinical outcomes. The inclusion of BMIPP data improved the prognostic values of conventional significant predictors. In conclusion, impaired myocardial I-123-BMIPP uptake and perfusion-BMIPP mismatch are related to a high probability of fatal and non-fatal cardiac events, suggesting the aetiological relevance and prognostic value of impaired cardiac fatty acid metabolism in viable, but jeopardized, myocardium following acute myocardial infarction.

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