1. Assessing myocardial viability and infarct transmurality with left ventricular electromechanical mapping in patients with stable coronary artery disease: validation by delayed-enhancement magnetic resonance imaging
- Author
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Raja Muthupillai, Scott D. Flamm, Guilherme V. Silva, William K. Vaughn, Andre L.S. Sousa, Rogerio Sarmento-Leite, Brenda Lambert, Marcus Howell, and Emerson C. Perin
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Heart Ventricles ,Myocardial Infarction ,Delayed enhancement ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary disease ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Coronary artery disease ,Reference Values ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Cardiac catheterization ,Aged ,Myocardial tissue ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Body Surface Potential Mapping ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Heart ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,ROC Curve ,Cardiology ,Female ,Myocardial infarction diagnosis ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background— This study was designed to define myocardial viability and establish practical cut-off values for differentiating normal myocardial tissue from subendocardial and transmural scar tissue by using electromechanical mapping (EMM). We validated our results by delayed-enhancement cardiac MRI (DE-MRI). Methods and Results— We prospectively studied 15 ambulatory patients with stable coronary disease who were candidates for cardiac catheterization. Within 48 hours of EMM, DE-MRI was performed. Using EMM software, we created a bull’s eye precisely matched to that generated by DE-MRI. Segment by segment, we compared the MRI results to the corresponding unipolar voltage value for that same segment in the EMM bull’s eye. Of 300 total segments, 275 were compared. The segments were divided into normal (n=211), subendocardial scar (n=49), and transmural scar (n=15). We found that subendocardial (6.8±2.9 mV) and transmural (4.6±1.9 mV) scar segments had significantly less unipolar voltage than normal (11.6±4.5 mV) segments ( P Conclusions— Our results demonstrate that normal myocardium can be accurately distinguished from myocardium with subendocardial or transmural infarcts on the basis of unipolar voltage values obtained through EMM. This is the first study to validate these results by using cardiac DE-MRI in humans.
- Published
- 2002