15 results on '"Piechnik, Stefan K."'
Search Results
2. Measurement of myocardial native T1 in cardiovascular diseases and norm in 1291 subjects.
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Liu, Joanna M., Liu, Alexander, Leal, Joana, McMillan, Fiona, Francis, Jane, Greiser, Andreas, Rider, Oliver J., Myerson, Saul, Neubauer, Stefan, Ferreira, Vanessa M., and Piechnik, Stefan K.
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CARDIOMYOPATHIES ,CARDIAC hypertrophy ,MYOCARDIUM ,BODY surface mapping ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,REPORTING of diseases ,REFERENCE values ,CONTRAST media ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ANATOMY ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Native T1-mapping provides quantitative myocardial tissue characterization for cardiovascular diseases (CVD), without the need for gadolinium. However, its translation into clinical practice is hindered by differences between techniques and the lack of established reference values. We provide typical myocardial T1-ranges for 18 commonly encountered CVDs using a single T1-mapping technique - Shortened Look-Locker Inversion Recovery (ShMOLLI), also used in the large UK Biobank and Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Registry study. Methods: We analyzed 1291 subjects who underwent CMR (1.5-Tesla, MAGNETOM-Avanto, Siemens Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany) between 2009 and 2016, who had a single CVD diagnosis, with mid-ventricular T1-map assessment. A region of interest (ROI) was placed on native T1-maps in the "most-affected myocardium", characterized by the presence of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), or regional wall motion abnormalities (RWMA) on cines. Another ROI was placed in the "reference myocardium" as far as possible from LGE/RWMA, and in the septum if no focal abnormality was present. To further define normality, we included native T1 of healthy subjects from an existing dataset after sub-endocardial pixelerosions. Results: Native T1 of patients with normal CMR (938 ± 21 ms) was similar compared to healthy subjects (941 ± 23 ms). Across all patient groups (57 ± 19 yrs., 65% males), focally affected myocardium had significantly different T1 value compared to reference myocardium (all p < 0.001). In the affected myocardium, cardiac amyloidosis (1119 ± 61 ms) had the highest native T1 compared to normal and all other CVDs, while iron-overload (795 ± 58 ms) and Anderson-Fabry disease (863 ± 23 ms) had the lowest native reference T1 (all p < 0.001). Future studies designed to detect the large T1 differences between affected and reference myocardium are estimated to require small sample-sizes (n < 50). However, studies designed to detect the small T1 differences between reference myocardium in CVDs and healthy controls can require several thousand of subjects. Conclusions: We provide typical T1-ranges for common clinical cardiac conditions in the largest cohort to-date, using ShMOLLI T1-mapping at 1.5 T. Sample-size calculations from this study may be useful for the design of future studies and trials that use T1-mapping as an endpoint. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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3. Reproducibility of native myocardial T1 mapping in the assessment of Fabry disease and its role in early detection of cardiac involvement by cardiovascular magnetic resonance.
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Pica, Silvia, Sado, Daniel M., Maestrini, Viviana, Fontana, Marianna, White, Steven K., Treibel, Thomas, Captur, Gabriella, Anderson, Sarah, Piechnik, Stefan K., Robson, Matthew D., Lachmann, Robin H., Murphy, Elaine, Mehta, Atul, Hughes, Derralyn, Kellman, Peter, Elliott, Perry M., Herrey, Anna S., and Moon, James C.
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ANGIOKERATOMA corporis diffusum ,LEFT ventricular hypertrophy ,AGE distribution ,AGE factors in disease ,DIASTOLE (Cardiac cycle) ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,CARDIAC contraction ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SEX distribution ,INTER-observer reliability ,EARLY diagnosis ,GENOTYPES ,INTRACLASS correlation ,GENETICS ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) derived native myocardial T1 is decreased in patients with Fabry disease even before left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) occurs and may be the first non-invasive measure of myocyte sphingolipid storage. The relationship of native T1 lowering prior to hypertrophy and other candidate early phenotype markers are unknown. Furthermore, the reproducibility of T1 mapping has never been assessed in Fabry disease. Methods: Sixty-three patients, 34 (54%) female, mean age 48 ± 15 years with confirmed (genotyped) Fabry disease underwent CMR, ECG and echocardiographic assessment. LVH was absent in 25 (40%) patients. Native T1 mapping was performed with both Modified Look-Locker Inversion recovery (MOLLI) sequences and a shortened version (ShMOLLI) at 1.5 Tesla. Twenty-one patients underwent a second scan within 24 hours to assess inter-study reproducibility. Results were compared with 63 healthy age and gender-matched volunteers. Results: Mean native T1 in Fabry disease (LVH positive), (LVH negative) and healthy volunteers was 853 ± 50 ms, 904 ± 46 ms and 968 ± 32 ms (for all p < 0.0001) by ShMOLLI sequences. Native T1 showed high inter-study, intra-observer and inter-observer agreement with intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) of 0.99, 0.98, 0.97 (ShMOLLI) and 0.98, 0.98, 0.98 (MOLLI). In Fabry disease LVH negative individuals, low native T1 was associated with reduced echocardiographic-based global longitudinal speckle tracking strain (-18 ± 2% vs -22 ± 2%, p = 0.001) and early diastolic function impairment (E/E' = 7 [6-8] vs 5 [5-6], p = 0.028). Conclusion: Native T1 mapping in Fabry disease is a reproducible technique. T1 reduction prior to the onset of LVH is associated with early diastolic and systolic changes measured by echocardiography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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4. Adenosine stress native T1 mapping in severe aortic stenosis: evidence for a role of the intravascular compartment on myocardial T1 values.
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Mahmod, Masliza, Piechnik, Stefan K., Levelt, Eylem, Ferreira, Vanessa M., Francis, Jane M., Lewis, Andrew, Pal, Nikhil, Dass, Sairia, Ashrafian, Houman, Neubauer, Stefan, and Karamitsos, Theodoros D.
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LEFT heart ventricle , *HEART physiology , *MYOCARDIUM physiology , *ADENOSINES , *AORTIC stenosis , *VASODILATION , *DIAGNOSTIC imaging , *HEART function tests , *PROSTHETIC heart valves , *HYPEREMIA , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *POSTOPERATIVE period , *CONTRAST media , *SEVERITY of illness index , *INTRAVASCULAR space , *PREOPERATIVE period , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Myocardial T1 relaxation times have been reported to be markedly abnormal in diverse myocardial pathologies, ascribed to interstitial changes, evaluated by T1 mapping and calculation of extracellular volume (ECV). T1 mapping is sensitive to myocardial water content of both intra- and extracellular in origin, but the effect of intravascular compartment changes on T1 has been largely neglected. We aimed to assess the role of intravascular compartment on native (pre-contrast) T1 values by studying the effect of adenosine-induced vasodilatation in patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS) before and after aortic valve replacement (AVR). Methods: 42 subjects (26 patients with severe AS without obstructive coronary artery disease and 16 controls) underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance at 3 T for native T1-mapping (ShMOLLI), first-pass perfusion (myocardial perfusion reserve index-MPRI) at rest and during adenosine stress, and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE). Results: AS patients had increased resting myocardial T1 (1196 ± 47 ms vs. 1168 ± 27 ms, p = 0.037), reduced MPRI (0.92 ± 0.31 vs. 1.74 ± 0.32, p < 0.001), and increased left ventricular mass index (LVMI) and LGE volume compared to controls. During adenosine stress, T1 in AS was similar to controls (1240 ± 51 ms vs. 1238 ± 54 ms, p = 0.88), possibly reflecting a similar level of maximal coronary vasodilatation in both groups. Conversely, the T1 response to stress was blunted in AS (AT1 3.7 ± 2.7% vs. 6.0 ± 4.2% in controls, p = 0.013). Seven months after AVR (n = 16) myocardial T1 and response to adenosine stress recovered towards normal. Native T1 values correlated with reduced MPRI, aortic valve area, and increased LVMI. Conclusions: Our study suggests that native myocardial T1 values are not only influenced by interstitial and intracellular water changes, but also by changes in the intravascular compartment. Performing T1 mapping during or soon after vasodilator stress may affect ECV measurements given that hyperemia alone appears to substantially alter T1 values. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
5. Native T1-mapping detects the location, extent and patterns of acute myocarditis without the need for gadolinium contrast agents.
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Ferreira, Vanessa M., Piechnik, Stefan K., Dall¿Armellina, Erica, Karamitsos, Theodoros D., Francis, Jane M., Ntusi, Ntobeko, Holloway, Cameron, Choudhury, Robin P., Kardos, Attila, Robson, Matthew D., Friedrich, Matthias G., and Neubauer, Stefan
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MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ANALYSIS of variance , *LONGITUDINAL method , *CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *STATISTICS , *T-test (Statistics) , *U-statistics , *DATA analysis , *CONTRAST media , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background Acute myocarditis can be diagnosed on cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) using multiple techniques, including late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging, which requires contrast administration. Native T1-mapping is significantly more sensitive than LGE and conventional T2-weighted (T2W) imaging in detecting myocarditis. The aims of this study were to demonstrate how to display the non-ischemic patterns of injury and to quantify myocardial involvement in acute myocarditis without the need for contrast agents, using topographic T1-maps and incremental T1 thresholds. Methods We studied 60 patients with suspected acute myocarditis (median 3 days from presentation) and 50 controls using CMR (1.5 T), including:(1) dark-blood T2W imaging; (2) native T1-mapping (ShMOLLI); (3) LGE. Analysis included: (1) global myocardial T2 signal intensity (SI) ratio compared to skeletal muscle; (2) myocardial T1 times; (3) areas of injury by T2W, T1-mapping and LGE. Results Compared to controls, patients had more edema (global myocardial T2 SI ratio 1.71 ± 0.27 vs.1.56 ± 0.15), higher mean myocardial T1 (1011 ± 64 ms vs. 946 ± 23 ms) and more areas of injury as detected by T2W (median 5% vs. 0%), T1 (median 32% vs. 0.7%) and LGE (median 11% vs. 0%); all p < 0.001. A threshold of T1 > 990 ms (sensitivity 90%, specificity 88%) detected significantly larger areas of involvement than T2W and LGE imaging in patients, and additional areas of injury when T2W and LGE were negative. T1-mapping significantly improved the diagnostic confidence in an additional 30% of cases when at least one of the conventional methods (T2W, LGE) failed to identify any areas of abnormality. Using incremental thresholds, T1-mapping can display the non-ischemic patterns of injury typical of myocarditis. Conclusion Native T1-mapping can display the typical non-ischemic patterns in acute myocarditis, similar to LGE imaging but without the need for contrast agents. In addition, T1-mapping offers significant incremental diagnostic value, detecting additional areas of myocardial involvement beyond T2W and LGE imaging and identified extra cases when these conventional methods failed to identify abnormalities. In the future, it may be possible to perform gadolinium-free CMR using cine and T1-mapping for tissue characterization and may be particularly useful for patients in whom gadolinium contrast is contraindicated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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6. Subclinical myocardial inflammation and diffuse fibrosis are common in systemic sclerosis - a clinical study using myocardial T1-mapping and extracellular volume quantification.
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Ntusi, Ntobeko A. B., Piechnik, Stefan K., Francis, Jane M., Ferreira, Vanessa M., Rai, Aitzaz B. S., Matthews, Paul M., Robson, Matthew D., Moon, James, Wordsworth, Paul B., Neubauer, Stefan, and Karamitsos, Theodoros D.
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INFLAMMATION , *FIBROSIS , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY , *CHI-squared test , *STATISTICAL correlation , *FISHER exact test , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MYOCARDIUM , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICS , *SYSTEMIC scleroderma , *T-test (Statistics) , *U-statistics , *DATA analysis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISEASE complications , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is characterised by multi-organ tissue fibrosis including the myocardium. Diffuse myocardial fibrosis can be detected non-invasively by T1 and extracellular volume (ECV) quantification, while focal myocardial inflammation and fibrosis may be detected by T2-weighted and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), respectively, using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). We hypothesised that multiparametric CMR can detect subclinical myocardial involvement in patients with SSc. Methods 19 SSc patients (18 female, mean age 55 ± 10 years) and 20 controls (19 female, mean age 56 ± 8 years) without overt cardiovascular disease underwent CMR at 1.5T, including cine, tagging, T1-mapping, T2-weighted, LGE imaging and ECV quantification. Results Focal fibrosis on LGE was found in 10 SSc patients (53%) but none of controls. SSc patients also had areas of myocardial oedema on T2-weighted imaging (median 13 vs. 0% in controls). SSc patients had significantly higher native myocardial T1 values (1007 ± 29 vs. 958 ± 20 ms, p < 0.001), larger areas of myocardial involvement by native T1 >990 ms (median 52 vs. 3% in controls) and expansion of ECV (35.4 ± 4.8 vs. 27.6 ± 2.5%, p < 0.001), likely representing a combination of low-grade inflammation and diffuse myocardial fibrosis. Regardless of any regional fibrosis, native T1 and ECV were significantly elevated in SSc and correlated with disease activity and severity. Although biventricular size and global function were preserved, there was impairment in the peak systolic circumferential strain (-16.8 ± 1.6 vs. -18.6 ± 1.0, p < 0.001) and peak diastolic strain rate (83 ± 26 vs. 114 ± 16 s-1, p < 0.001) in SSc, which inversely correlated with diffuse myocardial fibrosis indices. Conclusions Cardiac involvement is common in SSc even in the absence of cardiac symptoms, and includes chronic myocardial inflammation as well as focal and diffuse myocardial fibrosis. Myocardial abnormalities detected on CMR were associated with impaired strain parameters, as well as disease activity and severity in SSc patients. CMR may be useful in future in the study of treatments aimed at preventing or reducing adverse myocardial processes in SSc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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7. Comparison of T1 mapping techniques for ECV quantification. Histological validation and reproducibility of ShMOLLI versus multibreath-hold T1 quantification equilibrium contrast CMR.
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Fontana, Marianna, White, Steve K., Banypersad, Sanjay M., Sado, Daniel M., Maestrini, Viviana, Flett, Andrew S., Piechnik, Stefan K., Neubauer, Stefan, Roberts, Neil, and Moon, James C.
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CARDIOMYOPATHIES ,HEART diseases ,AORTIC stenosis ,AORTIC valve diseases ,STENOSIS ,FIBROSIS ,BIOPSY ,COLLAGEN ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EXTRACELLULAR space ,CARDIAC hypertrophy ,HEMATOCRIT ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MYOCARDIUM ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH evaluation ,STATISTICAL reliability ,BREATH holding ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,CONTRAST media ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTRACLASS correlation ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Myocardial extracellular volume (ECV) is elevated in fibrosis or infiltration and can be quantified by measuring the haematocrit with pre and post contrast T1 at sufficient contrast equilibrium. Equilibrium CMR (EQ-CMR), using a bolus-infusion protocol, has been shown to provide robust measurements of ECV using a multibreath-hold T1 pulse sequence. Newer, faster sequences for T1 mapping promise whole heart coverage and improved clinical utility, but have not been validated.Methods: Multibreathhold T1 quantification with heart rate correction and single breath-hold T1 mapping using Shortened Modified Look-Locker Inversion recovery (ShMOLLI) were used in equilibrium contrast CMR to generate ECV values and compared in 3 ways. Firstly, both techniques were compared in a spectrum of disease with variable ECV expansion (n=100, 50 healthy volunteers, 12 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, 18 with severe aortic stenosis, 20 with amyloid). Secondly, both techniques were correlated to human histological collagen volume fraction (CVF%, n=18, severe aortic stenosis biopsies). Thirdly, an assessment of test:retest reproducibility of the 2 CMR techniques was performed 1 week apart in individuals with widely different ECVs (n=10 healthy volunteers, n=7 amyloid patients). Results: More patients were able to perform ShMOLLI than the multibreath-hold technique (6% unable to breath-hold). ECV calculated by multibreath-hold T1 and ShMOLLI showed strong correlation (r
2 =0.892), little bias (bias -2.2%, 95%CI -8.9% to 4.6%) and good agreement (ICC 0.922, range 0.802 to 0.961, p<0.0001). ECV correlated with histological CVF% by multibreath-hold ECV (r2 = 0.589) but better by ShMOLLI ECV (r2 = 0.685). Inter-study reproducibility demonstrated that ShMOLLI ECV trended towards greater reproducibility than the multibreath-hold ECV, although this did not reach statistical significance (95%CI -4.9% to 5.4% versus 95%CI -6.4% to 7.3% respectively, p=0.21). Conclusions: ECV quantification by single breath-hold ShMOLLI T1 mapping can measure ECV by EQ-CMR across the spectrum of interstitial expansion. It is procedurally better tolerated, slightly more reproducible and better correlates with histology compared to the older multibreath-hold FLASH techniques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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8. Inflammatory bowel disease andmyocarditis: T1-mapping the heart of the problem.
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Carande, Elliott J., Piechnik, Stefan K., Myerson, Saul G., and Ferreira, Vanessa M.
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INFLAMMATORY bowel disease treatment ,CARDIOMYOPATHIES ,ANTICOAGULANTS ,CORONARY arteries ,EDEMA ,GASTROINTESTINAL hemorrhage ,INFLAMMATION ,INFLAMMATORY bowel diseases ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,ULCERATIVE colitis ,DISEASE exacerbation ,PLATELET aggregation inhibitors ,ACUTE coronary syndrome ,SKELETAL muscle ,DISEASE complications ,DIAGNOSIS - Published
- 2017
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9. The diagnostic performance of novel techniques for the detection of acute myocarditis: a clinical study using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging.
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Ferreira, Vanessa, Piechnik, Stefan K., Dall'Armellina, Erica, Karamitsos, Theodoros, Francis, Jane M., Ntusi, Ntobeko, Holloway, Cameron, Choudhury, Robin P., Kardos, Attila, Robson, Matthew D., Friedrich, Matthias G., and Neubauer, Stefan
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CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *CARDIOVASCULAR disease diagnosis , *CONFERENCES & conventions , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
An abstract of the article "The diagnostic performance of novel techniques for the detection of acute myocarditis: a clinical study using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging," by Vanessa Ferreira and colleagues is presented.
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- 2013
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10. Native T1 lowering in iron overload and Anderson Fabry disease; a novel and early marker of disease.
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Sado, Daniel, White, Steven K., Piechnik, Stefan K., Banypersad, Sanjay M., Treibel, Thomas A., Fontana, Marianna, Captur, Gaby, Maestrini, Viviana, Lachmann, Robin, Hughes, Derralyn, Murphy, Elaine, Porter, John, Mehta, Atul, Elliott, Perry, and Moon, James
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ANGIOKERATOMA corporis diffusum ,BIOMARKERS ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,IRON in the body ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,TIME ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
An abstract of the article "Native T1 lowering in iron overload and Anderson Fabry disease; a novel and early marker of disease," by Daniel Sado and colleagues is presented.
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- 2013
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11. Impaired myocardial perfusion in moderate asymptomatic aortic stenosis relates to longitudinal strain but not non-contrast T1 values.
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Bull, Sacha, Loudon, Margaret, Ntusi, Ntobeko, Joseph, Jubin P., Francis, Jane M., Ferreira, Vanessa, Piechnik, Stefan K., Karamitsos, Theodoros, Neubauer, Stefan, and Myerson, Saul
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AORTIC stenosis ,BLOOD circulation ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,MYOCARDIUM ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
An abstract of the article "Impaired myocardial perfusion in moderate asymptomatic aortic stenosis relates to longitudinal strain but not non-contrast T1 values," by Sacha Bull and colleagues is presented.
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- 2013
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12. Is it really fat? Ask a T1-map.
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Ferreira, Vanessa M., Holloway, Cameron J., Piechnik, Stefan K., Karamitsos, Theodoros D., and Neubauer, Stefan
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CARDIOVASCULAR disease diagnosis ,DIAGNOSIS of dyspnea ,HEART tumors ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,DIAGNOSTIC imaging ,ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
The article describes the case of a 67-year old woman who presented with dyspnoea.
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- 2013
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13. Comprehensive cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy reveals a high burden of myocardial disease in HIV infection.
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Holloway, Cameron, Ntusi, Ntobeko, Suttie, Joseph, Mahmod, Masliza, Wainwright, Emma, Clutton, Genevieve, Hancock, Gemma, Beak, Philip, Tajar, Abdelouahid, Piechnik, Stefan K., Schneider, Jurgen E., Clarke, Kieran, Dorrell, Lucy, and Neubauer, Stefan
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CARDIOMYOPATHIES ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,HIV-positive persons ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,SPECTRUM analysis ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
An abstract of the article "Comprehensive cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy reveals a high burden of myocardial disease in HIV infection," by Cameron Holloway and colleagues is presented.
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- 2013
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14. Diagnosis of Microvascular Angina Using Cardiac Magnetic Resonance.
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Liu, Alexander, Wijesurendra, Rohan S., Liu, Joanna M., Forfar, John C., Channon, Keith M., Jerosch-Herold, Michael, Piechnik, Stefan K., Neubauer, Stefan, Kharbanda, Rajesh K., and Ferreira, Vanessa M.
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MICROVASCULAR angina , *CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging , *CORONARY disease , *DIAGNOSIS , *CORONARY angiography , *MEDICAL statistics - Abstract
Background: In patients with angina and nonobstructive coronary artery disease (NOCAD), confirming symptoms due to coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) remains challenging. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) assesses myocardial perfusion with high spatial resolution and is widely used for diagnosing obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD).Objectives: The goal of this study was to validate CMR for diagnosing microvascular angina in patients with NOCAD, compared with patients with obstructive CAD and correlated to the index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR) during invasive coronary angiography.Methods: Fifty patients with angina (65 ± 9 years of age) and 20 age-matched healthy control subjects underwent adenosine stress CMR (1.5- and 3-T) to assess left ventricular function, inducible ischemia (myocardial perfusion reserve index [MPRI]; myocardial blood flow [MBF]), and infarction (late gadolinium enhancement). During subsequent angiography within 7 days, 28 patients had obstructive CAD (fractional flow reserve [FFR] ≤0.8) and 22 patients had NOCAD (FFR >0.8) who underwent 3-vessel IMR measurements.Results: In patients with NOCAD, myocardium with IMR <25 U had normal MPRI (1.9 ± 0.4 vs. controls 2.0 ± 0.3; p = 0.49); myocardium with IMR ≥25 U had significantly impaired MPRI, similar to ischemic myocardium downstream of obstructive CAD (1.2 ± 0.3 vs. 1.2 ± 0.4; p = 0.61). An MPRI of 1.4 accurately detected impaired perfusion related to CMD (IMR ≥25 U; FFR >0.8) (area under the curve: 0.90; specificity: 95%; sensitivity: 89%; p < 0.001). Impaired MPRI in patients with NOCAD was driven by impaired augmentation of MBF during stress, with normal resting MBF. Myocardium with FFR >0.8 and normal IMR (<25 U) still had blunted stress MBF, suggesting mild CMD, which was distinguishable from control subjects by using a stress MBF threshold of 2.3 ml/min/g with 100% positive predictive value.Conclusions: In angina patients with NOCAD, CMR can objectively and noninvasively assess microvascular angina. A CMR-based combined diagnostic pathway for both epicardial and microvascular CAD deserves further clinical validation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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15. Gadolinium-Free Cardiac MR Stress T1-Mapping to Distinguish Epicardial From Microvascular Coronary Disease.
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Liu, Alexander, Wijesurendra, Rohan S., Liu, Joanna M., Greiser, Andreas, Jerosch-Herold, Michael, Forfar, John C., Channon, Keith M., Piechnik, Stefan K., Neubauer, Stefan, Kharbanda, Rajesh K., and Ferreira, Vanessa M.
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CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging , *MICROCIRCULATION disorders , *BIOMARKERS , *LEFT heart ventricle , *MEDICAL statistics , *DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Novel cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) stress T1 mapping can detect ischemia and myocardial blood volume changes without contrast agents and may be a more comprehensive ischemia biomarker than myocardial blood flow.Objectives: This study describes the performance of the first prospective validation of stress T1 mapping against invasive coronary measurements for detecting obstructive epicardial coronary artery disease (CAD), defined by fractional flow reserve (FFR <0.8), and coronary microvascular dysfunction, defined by FFR ≥0.8 and the index of microcirculatory resistance (IMR ≥25 U), compared with first-pass perfusion imaging.Methods: Ninety subjects (60 patients with angina; 30 healthy control subjects) underwent CMR (1.5- and 3-T) to assess left ventricular function (cine), ischemia (adenosine stress/rest T1 mapping and perfusion), and infarction (late gadolinium enhancement). FFR and IMR were assessed ≤7 days post-CMR. Stress and rest images were analyzed blinded to other information.Results: Normal myocardial T1 reactivity (ΔT1) was 6.2 ± 0.4% (1.5-T) and 6.2 ± 1.3% (3-T). Ischemic viable myocardium downstream of obstructive CAD showed near-abolished T1 reactivity (ΔT1 = 0.7 ± 0.7%). Myocardium downstream of nonobstructive coronary arteries with microvascular dysfunction showed less-blunted T1 reactivity (ΔT1 = 3.0 ± 0.9%). Stress T1 mapping significantly outperformed gadolinium-based first-pass perfusion, including absolute quantification of myocardial blood flow, for detecting obstructive CAD (area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve: 0.97 ± 0.02 vs. 0.91 ± 0.03, respectively; p < 0.001). A ΔT1 of 1.5% accurately detected obstructive CAD (sensitivity: 93%; specificity: 95%; p < 0.001), whereas a less-blunted ΔT1 of 4.0% accurately detected microvascular dysfunction (area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve: 0.95 ± 0.03; sensitivity: 94%; specificity: 94%: p < 0.001).Conclusions: CMR stress T1 mapping accurately detected and differentiated between obstructive epicardial CAD and microvascular dysfunction, without contrast agents or radiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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