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2.
J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ; 12: 46, 2010 Jul 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20673372

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To examine relationships between severity of echocardiography (echo) -evidenced diastolic dysfunction (DD) and volumetric filling by automated processing of routine cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). BACKGROUND: Cine-CMR provides high-resolution assessment of left ventricular (LV) chamber volumes. Automated segmentation (LV-METRIC) yields LV filling curves by segmenting all short-axis images across all temporal phases. This study used cine-CMR to assess filling changes that occur with progressive DD. METHODS: 115 post-MI patients underwent CMR and echo within 1 day. LV-METRIC yielded multiple diastolic indices - E:A ratio, peak filling rate (PFR), time to peak filling rate (TPFR), and diastolic volume recovery (DVR80 - proportion of diastole required to recover 80% stroke volume). Echo was the reference for DD. RESULTS: LV-METRIC successfully generated LV filling curves in all patients. CMR indices were reproducible (< or = 1% inter-reader differences) and required minimal processing time (175 +/- 34 images/exam, 2:09 +/- 0:51 minutes). CMR E:A ratio decreased with grade 1 and increased with grades 2-3 DD. Diastolic filling intervals, measured by DVR80 or TPFR, prolonged with grade 1 and shortened with grade 3 DD, paralleling echo deceleration time (p < 0.001). PFR by CMR increased with DD grade, similar to E/e' (p < 0.001). Prolonged DVR80 identified 71% of patients with echo-evidenced grade 1 but no patients with grade 3 DD, and stroke-volume adjusted PFR identified 67% with grade 3 but none with grade 1 DD (matched specificity = 83%). The combination of DVR80 and PFR identified 53% of patients with grade 2 DD. Prolonged DVR80 was associated with grade 1 (OR 2.79, CI 1.65-4.05, p = 0.001) with a similar trend for grade 2 (OR 1.35, CI 0.98-1.74, p = 0.06), whereas high PFR was associated with grade 3 (OR 1.14, CI 1.02-1.25, p = 0.02) DD. CONCLUSIONS: Automated cine-CMR segmentation can discern LV filling changes that occur with increasing severity of echo-evidenced DD. Impaired relaxation is associated with prolonged filling intervals whereas restrictive filling is characterized by increased filling rates.


Subject(s)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/diagnosis , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/physiopathology , Aged , Automation , Diastole , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardial Infarction/physiopathology , Severity of Illness Index , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/etiology
3.
Coron Artery Dis ; 20(1): 41-9, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19050598

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess the utility of stress electrocardiography (ECG) for identifying the presence and severity of obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) defined by coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) among patients with normal nuclear myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI). METHODS: The study population comprised 119 consecutive patients with normal MPI who also underwent CCTA (interval 3.5+/-3.8 months). Stress ECG was performed at the time of MPI. CCTA and MPI were interpreted using established scoring systems, and CCTA was used to define the presence and extent of CAD, which was quantified by a coronary artery jeopardy score. RESULTS: Within this population, 28 patients (24%) had obstructive CAD identified by CCTA. The most common CAD pattern was single-vessel CAD (61%), although proximal vessel involvement was present in 46% of patients. Patients with CAD were nearly three times more likely to have positive standard test responses (1 mm ST-segment deviation) than patients with patent coronary arteries (36 vs. 13%, P=0.007). In multivariate analysis, a positive ST-segment test response was an independent marker for CAD (odds ratio: 2.02, confidence interval: 1.09-3.78, P=0.03) even after adjustment for a composite of clinical cardiac risk factors (odds ratio: 1.85, confidence interval: 1.05-3.23, P=0.03). Despite uniformly normal MPI, mean coronary jeopardy score was three-fold higher among patients with positive compared to those with negative ST-segment response to exercise or dobutamine stress (1.9+/-2.7 vs. 0.5+/-1.4, P=0.03). CONCLUSION: Stress-induced ST-segment deviation is an independent marker for obstructive CAD among patients with normal MPI. A positive stress ECG identifies patients with a greater anatomic extent of CAD as quantified by coronary jeopardy score.


Subject(s)
Coronary Angiography/methods , Coronary Stenosis/diagnosis , Electrocardiography , Exercise Test , Myocardial Perfusion Imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Aged , Coronary Stenosis/diagnostic imaging , Coronary Stenosis/etiology , Female , Humans , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Male , Middle Aged , Multivariate Analysis , Odds Ratio , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Severity of Illness Index
4.
J Nucl Cardiol ; 14(5): 659-68, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17826319

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Diagnostic assessment of myocardial perfusion impacts the management of patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). Although various image displays are available for single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) interpretation, the effects of display differences on SPECT interpretation remain undetermined. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 183 patients undergoing SPECT, including 131 consecutive patients referred for angiography and 52 at low CAD risk. Studies were visually interpreted by use of color and gray images, with readers blinded to the results of the other display. In accordance with established criteria, a summed stress score (SSS) of 4 or greater was considered abnormal. The prevalence of abnormal SPECT findings was higher with gray images than with color images (54% vs 48%, P < .001) based on a uniform criterion (SSS > or =4). However, color images yielded equivalent sensitivity (79% vs 82%, P = .7) and improved specificity for global (50% vs 33%, P = .02) and vessel-specific CAD involving the right coronary artery (P < .01) and left anterior descending artery (P < .05). When the criterion for gray images was adjusted upward (SSS > or =5) to reflect increased mean defect severity (SSS of 5.1 vs 4.4, P = .01), gray and color images provided equivalent sensitivity and specificity for global and vessel-specific CAD. CONCLUSIONS: SPECT interpretation can vary according to image display as a result of differences in perfusion defect severity. Adjustment of abnormality criteria for gray images to reflect minor increases in defect severity provides equivalent diagnostic performance of gray and color displays for CAD assessment.


Subject(s)
Colorimetry/methods , Coronary Artery Disease/diagnostic imaging , Coronary Stenosis/diagnostic imaging , Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon/methods , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/diagnostic imaging , Adult , Coronary Artery Disease/complications , Coronary Stenosis/complications , Data Display , Female , Humans , Male , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Single-Blind Method , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/etiology
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