Background Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) is an accurate and reproducible method to delineate nonviable myocardium following myocardial infarction (MI). However, in the early stages following acute MI, LGE has been shown to overestimate the size of the infarct zone by up to 30%. The causes for this are unclear, and may be related to tissue remodelling, intracellular contrast uptake, or expansion of the interstitial space. Myocardial edema is a feature of reperfused acute MI, and edematous myocardium has been associated with early contrast enhancement [1]. We hypothesised that the presence of tissue edema is also related to late enhancement, and contributes to overestimation of infarct size in acute MI. Methods 46 patients received CMR examination at 3.0T at 2 days following reperfused ST-elevation acute MI, with follow-up imaging at 10 days and 3 months. Short-axis T2-weighted imaging and cine imaging were performed, as well as LGE imaging 16-20 minutes following administration of 0.1 mmol/kg gadolinium DTPA. Edema volume was measured on T2-weighted imaging and scar volume measured on LGE imaging, both quantified using a semi-automated histogram-based thresholding method (Otsu method). The change in scar volume was compared to the change in edema volume between day 2 and day 10, and between day 2 and 3 months.