71 results on '"Backhaus, Sören J."'
Search Results
52. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE BASED FULLY AUTOMATED MYOCARDIAL FUNCTION ASSESSMENT FOR DIAGNOSTIC AND PROGNOSTIC STRATIFICATION FOLLOWING MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
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Schuster, Andreas, primary, Lange, Torben, additional, Backhaus, Sören J., additional, Strohmeyer, Carolin, additional, Matz, Jonas, additional, Kowallick, Johannes, additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Steinmetz, Michael, additional, Kutty, Shelby, additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Gutberlet, Matthias, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, and Eitel, Ingo, additional
- Published
- 2020
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53. Prognostic Value of Different CMR-Based Techniques to Assess Left Ventricular Myocardial Strain in Takotsubo Syndrome
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Stiermaier, Thomas, Busch, Kira, Lange, Torben, Pätz, Toni, Meusel, Moritz, Backhaus, Sören J., Frydrychowicz, Alex, Barkhausen, Jörg, Gutberlet, Matthias, Thiele, Holger, Schuster, Andreas, Eitel, Ingo, Stiermaier, Thomas, Busch, Kira, Lange, Torben, Pätz, Toni, Meusel, Moritz, Backhaus, Sören J., Frydrychowicz, Alex, Barkhausen, Jörg, Gutberlet, Matthias, Thiele, Holger, Schuster, Andreas, and Eitel, Ingo
- Abstract
Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR)-derived left ventricular (LV) global longitudinal strain (GLS) provides incremental prognostic information on various cardiovascular diseases but has not yet been investigated comprehensively in patients with Takotsubo syndrome (TS). This study evaluated the prognostic value of feature tracking (FT) GLS, tissue tracking (TT) GLS, and fast manual long axis strain (LAS) in 147 patients with TS, who underwent CMR at a median of 2 days after admission. Long-term mortality was assessed 3 years after the acute event. In contrast to LV ejection fraction and tissue characteristics, impaired FT-GLS, TT-GLS and fast manual LAS were associated with adverse outcome. The best cutoff points for the prediction of long-term mortality were similar with all three approaches: FT-GLS −11.28%, TT-GLS −11.45%, and fast manual LAS −10.86%. Long-term mortality rates were significantly higher in patients with FT-GLS > −11.28% (25.0% versus 9.8%; p = 0.029), TT-GLS > −11.45% (20.0% versus 5.4%; p = 0.016), and LAS > −10.86% (23.3% versus 6.6%; p = 0.014). However, in multivariable analysis, diabetes mellitus (p = 0.001), atrial fibrillation (p = 0.001), malignancy (p = 0.006), and physical triggers (p = 0.006) outperformed measures of myocardial strain and emerged as the strongest, independent predictors of long-term mortality in TS. In conclusion, CMR-based longitudinal strain provides valuable prognostic information in patients with TS, regardless of the utilized technique of assessment. Long-term mortality, however, is mainly determined by comorbidities.
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- 2020
54. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Left Ventricular Mechanical Uniformity Alterations for Risk Assessment After Acute Myocardial Infarction
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Stiermaier, Thomas, Backhaus, Sören J., Lange, Torben, Koschalka, Alexander, Navarra, Jenny‐Lou, Boom, Patricia, Lamata, Pablo, Kowallick, Johannes T., Lotz, Joachim, Gutberlet, Matthias, de Waha‐Thiele, Suzanne, Desch, Steffen, Hasenfuß, Gerd, Thiele, Holger, Eitel, Ingo, and Schuster, Andreas
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acute myocardial infarction ,cardiac magnetic resonance ,feature tracking ,mechanical uniformity ,prognosis - Abstract
Background Despite limitations as a stand-alone parameter, left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction is the preferred measure of myocardial function and marker for postinfarction risk stratification. LV myocardial uniformity alterations may provide superior prognostic information after acute myocardial infarction, which was the subject of this study. Methods and Results Consecutive patients with acute myocardial infarction (n=1082; median age: 63 years; 75% male) undergoing cardiac magnetic resonance at a median of 3 days after infarction were included in this multicenter observational study. Circumferential and radial uniformity ratio estimates were derived from cardiac magnetic resonance feature tracking as markers of mechanical uniformity alterations (values between 0 and 1 with 1 reflecting perfect uniformity). The clinical end point was the 12-month rate of major adverse cardiac events, consisting of all-cause death, reinfarction, and new congestive heart failure. Patients with major adverse cardiac events (n=73) had significantly impaired circumferential uniformity ratio estimates (0.76 [interquartile range: 0.67-0.86] versus 0.84 [interquartile range: 0.76-0.89]; P35% (n=959), even after adjustment for established risk factors (hazard ratio: 1.99; 95% CI, 1.06-3.74; P=0.033 in multivariable Cox regression analysis). In contrast, LV ejection fraction was not associated with adverse events in this subgroup of patients with acute myocardial infarction. Conclusions Cardiac magnetic resonance-derived estimates of mechanical uniformity alterations are novel markers for risk assessment after acute myocardial infarction, and the circumferential uniformity ratio estimate provides independent prognostic information for patients with preserved or only moderately reduced LV ejection fraction. peerReviewed
- Published
- 2019
55. Impact of Right Atrial Physiology on Heart Failure and Adverse Events after Myocardial Infarction
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Schuster, Andreas, primary, Backhaus, Sören J., additional, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, Navarra, Jenny-Lou, additional, Uhlig, Johannes, additional, Rommel, Karl-Philipp, additional, Koschalka, Alexander, additional, Kowallick, Johannes T., additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Kutty, Shelby, additional, Gutberlet, Matthias, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, and Eitel, Ingo, additional
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- 2020
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56. Left Atrial Function with MRI Enables Prediction of Cardiovascular Events after Myocardial Infarction: Insights from the AIDA STEMI and TATORT NSTEMI Trials
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Schuster, Andreas, primary, Backhaus, Sören J., additional, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, Navarra, Jenny-Lou, additional, Uhlig, Johannes, additional, Rommel, Karl-Philipp, additional, Koschalka, Alexander, additional, Kowallick, Johannes T., additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Gutberlet, Matthias, additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Kutty, Shelby, additional, Hasenfuss, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, and Eitel, Ingo, additional
- Published
- 2019
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57. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Left Ventricular Mechanical Uniformity Alterations for Risk Assessment After Acute Myocardial Infarction
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Stiermaier, Thomas, primary, Backhaus, Sören J., additional, Lange, Torben, additional, Koschalka, Alexander, additional, Navarra, Jenny‐Lou, additional, Boom, Patricia, additional, Lamata, Pablo, additional, Kowallick, Johannes T., additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Gutberlet, Matthias, additional, de Waha‐Thiele, Suzanne, additional, Desch, Steffen, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, Eitel, Ingo, additional, and Schuster, Andreas, additional
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- 2019
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58. Culprit vessel-related myocardial mechanics and prognostic implications following acute myocardial infarction
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Backhaus, Sören J., primary, Kowallick, Johannes T., additional, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, Lange, Torben, additional, Koschalka, Alexander, additional, Navarra, Jenny-Lou, additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Kutty, Shelby, additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Gutberlet, Matthias, additional, Feistritzer, Hans-Josef, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, Schuster, Andreas, additional, and Eitel, Ingo, additional
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- 2019
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59. Fast manual long-axis strain assessment provides optimized cardiovascular event prediction following myocardial infarction
- Author
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Schuster, Andreas, primary, Backhaus, Sören J, additional, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, Kowallick, Johannes T, additional, Stulle, Alina, additional, Koschalka, Alexander, additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Kutty, Shelby, additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Gutberlet, Matthias, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, and Eitel, Ingo, additional
- Published
- 2019
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60. Frequency and prognostic impact of right ventricular involvement in acute myocardial infarction.
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Stiermaier, Thomas, Backhaus, Sören J., Matz, Jonas, Koschalka, Alexander, Kowallick, Johannes, de Waha- Thiele, Suzanne, Desch, Steffen, Gutberlet, Matthias, Hasenfuß, Gerd, Thiele, Holger, Eitel, Ingo, and Schuster, Andreas
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MYOCARDIAL infarction ,CORONARY artery bypass ,CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging - Published
- 2021
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61. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging feature tracking: Impact of training on observer performance and reproducibility
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Backhaus, Sören J., primary, Metschies, Georg, additional, Billing, Marcus, additional, Kowallick, Johannes T., additional, Gertz, Roman J., additional, Lapinskas, Tomas, additional, Pieske, Burkert, additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Kutty, Shelby, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Beerbaum, Philipp, additional, Kelle, Sebastian, additional, and Schuster, Andreas, additional
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- 2019
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62. Atrial mechanics and their prognostic impact in Takotsubo syndrome: a cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging study
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Backhaus, Sören J, primary, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, Lange, Torben, additional, Chiribiri, Amedeo, additional, Uhlig, Johannes, additional, Freund, Anne, additional, Kowallick, Johannes T, additional, Gertz, Roman J, additional, Bigalke, Boris, additional, Villa, Adriana, additional, Lotz, Joachim, additional, Hasenfuß, Gerd, additional, Thiele, Holger, additional, Eitel, Ingo, additional, and Schuster, Andreas, additional
- Published
- 2019
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63. Head‐to‐head comparison of cardiovascular MR feature tracking cine versus acquisition‐based deformation strain imaging using myocardial tagging and strain encoding.
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Backhaus, Sören J., Metschies, Georg, Zieschang, Victoria, Erley, Jennifer, Mahsa Zamani, Seyedeh, Kowallick, Johannes T., Lapinskas, Tomas, Pieske, Burkert, Lotz, Joachim, Kutty, Shelby, Hasenfuß, Gerd, Kelle, Sebastian, and Schuster, Andreas
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INTRACLASS correlation ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,HEART failure patients - Abstract
Purpose: Myocardial feature‐tracking (FT) deformation imaging is superior for risk stratification compared with volumetric approaches. Because there is no clear recommendation regarding FT postprocessing, we compared different FT‐strain analyses with reference standard techniques, including tagging and strain‐encoded (SENC) MRI. Methods: Feature‐tracking software from four different vendors (TomTec, Medis, Circle [CVI], and Neosoft), tagging (Segment), and fastSENC (MyoStrain) were used to determine left ventricular global circumferential strains (GCS) and longitudinal strains (GLS) in 12 healthy volunteers and 12 patients with heart failure. Variability and agreements were assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients for absolute agreement (ICCa) and consistency (ICCc) as well as Pearson correlation coefficients. Results: For FT‐GCS, consistency was excellent comparing different FT vendors (ICCc = 0.84‐0.97, r = 0.86‐0.95) and in comparison to fast SENC (ICCc = 0.78‐0.89, r = 0.73‐0.81). FT‐GCS consistency was excellent compared with tagging (ICCc = 0.79‐0.85, r = 0.74‐0.77) except for TomTec (ICCc = 0.68, r = 0.72). Absolute FT‐GCS agreements among FT vendors were highest for CVI and Medis (ICCa = 0.96) and lowest for TomTec and Neosoft (ICCa = 0.32). Similarly, absolute FT‐GCS agreements were excellent for CVI and Medis compared with both tagging and fast SENC (ICCa = 0.84‐0.88), good to excellent for Neosoft (ICCa = 0.77 and 0.64), and lowest for TomTec (ICCa = 0.41 and 0.47). For FT‐GLS, consistency was excellent (ICCc ≥ 0.86, r ≥ 0.76). Absolute agreements among FT vendors were excellent (ICCa = 0.91‐0.93) or good to excellent for TomTec (ICCa = 0.69‐0.85). Absolute agreements (ICCa) were good (CVI 0.70, Medis 0.60) and fair (TomTec 0.41, Neosoft 0.59) compared with tagging, but excellent compared with fast SENC (ICCa = 0.77‐0.90). Conclusion: Although absolute agreements differ depending on deformation assessment approaches, consistency and correlation are consistently high regardless of the method chosen, thus indicating reliable strain assessment. Further standardisation and introduction of uniform references is warranted for routine clinical implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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64. Prognostic utility of global longitudinal strain in myocardial infarction
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Schuster, Andreas, primary, Backhaus, Sören J, additional, Stiermaier, Thomas, additional, and Eitel, Ingo, additional
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- 2018
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65. Atrial functional assessment at rest and during exercise stress in left ventricular diastolic dysfunction.
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Backhaus, Sören J and Schuster, Andreas
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LEFT ventricular dysfunction ,HEART failure ,CARDIAC magnetic resonance imaging ,STRESS echocardiography - Published
- 2022
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66. FUNCTIONAL AND PROGNOSTIC IMPLICATIONS OF CARDIAC MAGNETIC RESONANCE FEATURE TRACKING DERIVED REMOTE MYOCARDIAL STRAIN ANALYSES IN PATIENTS FOLLOWING ACUTE MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION.
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Lange, Torben, Stiermaier, Thomas, Backhaus, Sören J., Boom, Patricia, Kowallick, Johannes, Lotz, Joachim, Kutty, Shelby, Bigalke, Boris, Gutberlet, Matthias, Hasenfuß, Gerd, Thiele, Holger, Eitel, Ingo, and Schuster, Andreas
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- *
MYOCARDIAL infarction , *MAGNETIC resonance - Published
- 2020
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67. Cardiovascular MRI-derived Right Atrial Strain for Improved Risk Stratification in Patients with Severe Aortic Stenosis.
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Lange T, Beuthner BE, Schulz A, Backhaus SJ, Evertz R, Rigorth KR, Toischer K, Kowallick JT, Hasenfuss G, Puls M, and Schuster A
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Prospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Prognosis, Severity of Illness Index, Aortic Valve Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Aortic Valve Stenosis surgery, Aortic Valve Stenosis physiopathology, Aortic Valve Stenosis mortality, Heart Atria diagnostic imaging, Heart Atria physiopathology, Heart Atria pathology, Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
- Abstract
Purpose To assess the prognostic implications of cardiac MRI-derived imaging markers in individuals with severe aortic stenosis (AS). Materials and Methods This prospective study (German Clinical Trials Register, DRKS00024479) enrolled individuals with severe AS who underwent cardiac MRI before transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) from January 2017 to March 2022. Image analyses included myocardial volumes, cardiac MRI feature tracking-derived left atrial (LA) and right atrial (RA) as well as left ventricular (LV) and right ventricular (RV) strain, myocardial T1 mapping, and late gadolinium enhancement analyses. Cardiovascular (CV) mortality was defined as primary clinical end point. Cox proportional hazards models were used to determine the association between cardiac MRI-derived parameters and CV mortality. Results The final analysis included 145 participants (median age, 80 years [IQR, 75-83 years]; 91 male). Participants who experienced CV death during follow-up had significantly enlarged RV end-diastolic volumes (median, 82.9 [IQR, 70.8-96.0] mL/m
2 vs 62.8 [54.7-76.0] mL/m2 ; P < .001) and impaired strain values of all cardiac chambers compared with those who survived (LV global longitudinal strain [GLS], -18.1% [-13.1% to -20.4%] vs -22.5% [-16.1% to -27.3%], P = .02; RV GLS, -22.9% [-18.6% to -25.4%] vs -27.9% [-22.9% to -32.0%], P = .002; LA atrial reservoir strain [Es], 9.5% [7.2%-15.4%] vs 14.3% [9.0%-18.1%], P = .04; RA Es, 12.4% [6.8%-14.4%] vs 16.2% [11.2%-22.1%], P < .001). RA reservoir strain independently helped predict CV mortality after adjustment for other cardiac MRI markers and clinical parameters of heart failure (hazard ratio, 0.82 [95% CI: 0.71, 0.95]; P = .008). Within the subgroup of participants with high extracellular volume values, RA strain further identified participants with AS at high risk for CV mortality ( P = .001 on log-rank testing). Conclusion In individuals with AS undergoing TAVR, several cardiac MRI parameters were significantly associated with CV mortality. RA strain was an independent predictor of CV mortality and may provide more optimized patient management. Keywords: Cardiac MRI, Aortic Stenosis, TAVR, Risk Assessment, Strain Analyses German Clinical Trials Register no. DRKS00024479 Supplemental material is available for this article. © RSNA, 2025.- Published
- 2025
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68. Association of Cardiac MRI-derived Aortic Stiffness with Early Stages and Progression of Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction.
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Schulz A, Schellinger IN, Backhaus SJ, Adler AS, Lange T, Evertz R, Kowallick JT, Hoffmann A, Matek C, Tsao PS, Hasenfuß G, Raaz U, and Schuster A
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- Aged, Animals, Female, Humans, Male, Mice, Echocardiography, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Prospective Studies, Pulse Wave Analysis, Disease Progression, Heart Failure physiopathology, Heart Failure diagnostic imaging, Stroke Volume physiology, Vascular Stiffness physiology
- Abstract
Purpose To investigate if aortic stiffening as detected with cardiac MRI is an early phenomenon in the development and progression of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Materials and Methods Both clinical and preclinical studies were performed. The clinical study was a secondary analysis of the prospective HFpEF stress trial (August 2017 through September 2019) and included 48 participants (median age, 69 years [range, 65-73 years]; 33 female, 15 male) with noncardiac dyspnea (NCD, n = 21), overt HFpEF at rest (pulmonary capillary wedge pressure [PCWP] ≥ 15 mm Hg, n = 14), and masked HFpEF at rest diagnosed during exercise stress (PCWP ≥ 25 mm Hg, n = 13) according to right heart catheterization. Additionally, all participants underwent echocardiography and cardiac MRI at rest and during exercise stress. Aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) was calculated. The mechanistic preclinical study characterized cardiac function and structure in transgenic mice with induced arterial stiffness (Runx2-smTg mice). Statistical analyses comprised nonparametric and parametric comparisons, Spearman correlations, and logistic regression models. Results Participants with HFpEF showed increased PWV (NCD vs masked HFpEF: 7.0 m/sec [IQR: 5.0-9.5 m/sec] vs 10.0 m/sec [IQR: 8.0-13.4 m/sec], P = .005; NCD vs overt HFpEF: 7.0 m/sec [IQR: 5.0-9.5 m/sec] vs 11.0 m/sec [IQR: 7.5-12.0 m/sec], P = .01). Increased PWV correlated with higher PCWP ( P = .006), left atrial and left ventricular long-axis strain (all P < .02), and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide levels ( P < .001). Participants with overt HFpEF had higher levels of myocardial fibrosis, as demonstrated by increased native T1 times (1199 msec [IQR: 1169-1228 msec] vs 1234 msec [IQR: 1208-1255 msec], P = .009). Aortic stiffness was independently associated with HFpEF on multivariable analyses (odds ratio, 1.31; P = .049). Runx2-smTG mice exhibited an "HFpEF" phenotype compared with wild-type controls, with preserved left ventricular fractional shortening but an early and late diastolic mitral annulus velocity less than 1 (mean, 0.67 ± 0.39 [standard error of the mean] vs 1.45 ± 0.47; P = .004), increased myocardial collagen deposition (mean, 11% ± 1 vs 2% ± 1; P < .001), and increased brain natriuretic peptide levels (mean, 171 pg/mL ± 23 vs 101 pg/mL ± 10; P < .001). Conclusion This study provides translational evidence that increased arterial stiffness might be associated with development and progression of HFpEF and may facilitate its early detection. Keywords: MR Functional Imaging, MR Imaging, Animal Studies, Cardiac, Aorta, Heart ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT03260621 Supplemental material is available for this article. © RSNA, 2024.
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- 2024
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69. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance rest and exercise-stress left atrioventricular coupling index to detect diastolic dysfunction.
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Backhaus SJ, Lange T, Schulz A, Evertz R, Frey SM, Hasenfuß G, and Schuster A
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- Humans, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, Stroke Volume physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Dyspnea, Heart Failure diagnostic imaging, Atrial Fibrillation, Noncommunicable Diseases, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left
- Abstract
Left atrial and ventricular (LA/LV) dysfunction are interlinked in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF); however, little is known about their interplay and relation to cardiac decompensation. We hypothesized that cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) left atrioventricular coupling index (LACI) would identify pathophysiological alterations in HFpEF and be amenable to rest and ergometer-stress CMR. Patients with exertional dyspnoea, signs of diastolic dysfunction (E/e' ≥ 8), and preserved ejection fraction (EF; ≥50%) on echocardiography were prospectively recruited and classified as HFpEF ( n = 34) or noncardiac dyspnoea (NCD, n = 34) according to pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) on right-heart catheterization (rest/stress ≥ 15/25 mmHg). LA and LV volumes were assessed on short-axis real-time cine sequences at rest and during exercise stress. LACI was defined as the ratio of the LA-to-LV end-diastolic volume. Cardiovascular hospitalization (CVH) was assessed after 24 mo. Volume-derived LA ( P ≥ 0.008) but not LV ( P ≥ 0.347) morphology and function at rest and during exercise stress detected significant differences comparing HFpEF and NCD. There was impaired atrioventricular coupling in HFpEF at rest (LACI, 45.7% vs. 31.6%, P < 0.001) and during exercise stress (45.7% vs. 27.9%, P < 0.001). LACI correlated with PCWP at rest ( r = 0.48, P < 0.001) and during exercise stress ( r = 0.55, P < 0.001). At rest, LACI was the only volumetry-derived parameter to differentiate patients with NCD from patients with HFpEF, which were identified using exercise-stress thresholds ( P = 0.001). Resting and exercise-stress LACI dichotomized at their medians were associated with CVH ( P ≤ 0.005). Assessment of LACI is a simple approach for LA/LV coupling quantification and allows easy and fast identification of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). NEW & NOTEWORTHY Evaluation of the left atrioventricular coupling index (LACI) in a rest and exercise-stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging protocol allows identification of patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction with high diagnostic accuracy. LACI holds similar diagnostic accuracy at rest compared with left atrial ejection fraction during exercise stress. This highlights the value of LACI as a widely available and cost-effective test for diastolic dysfunction, which may help to guide patient selection for referral to specialized testing/treatment.
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- 2023
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70. Fast manual long-axis strain assessment provides optimized cardiovascular event prediction following myocardial infarction.
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Schuster A, Backhaus SJ, Stiermaier T, Kowallick JT, Stulle A, Koschalka A, Lotz J, Kutty S, Bigalke B, Gutberlet M, Hasenfuß G, Thiele H, and Eitel I
- Subjects
- Aged, Contrast Media, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardial Infarction therapy, Prognosis, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left therapy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Myocardial Infarction diagnostic imaging, Myocardial Infarction physiopathology, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left physiopathology
- Abstract
Aims: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance feature tracking (CMR-FT) global longitudinal strain (GLS) provides incremental prognostic value following acute myocardial infarction (AMI) but requires substantial post-processing. Alternatively, manual global long-axis strain (LAS) can be easily assessed from standard steady state free precession images. We aimed to define the prognostic value of LAS in a large multicentre study in patients following AMI., Methods and Results: A total of 1235 patients with myocardial infarction [n = 795 with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and 440 with non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI)] underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging after primary percutaneous coronary intervention in eight centres across Germany. Assessment of LAS was performed in a blinded core-laboratory measuring the systolic shortening between the epicardial apical border and the middle of a line connecting the origins of the mitral leaflets. Primary clinical endpoint was the occurrence of major adverse clinical events (MACE) including death, reinfarction, and congestive heart failure within 1 year after AMI. During 1-year follow-up, 76 patients suffered from MACE. Impaired LAS was associated with higher MACE occurrence both in STEMI (P < 0.001) and NSTEMI (P = 0.001) patients. Association of LAS remained significant (P = 0.017) after correction for univariate significant parameters for MACE prediction. C-statistics revealed incremental value of additional LAS assessment for optimized event prediction compared with left ventricular ejection fraction (MACE P = 0.044; mortality P = 0.013) and a combination of established clinical and imaging parameters (MACE P = 0.084; mortality P = 0.027), but not CMR-FT GLS (MACE P = 0.075; mortality P = 0.380)., Conclusion: LAS provides software independent, widely available, easy and fast approximation of longitudinal left ventricular shortening early after reperfused AMI with incremental prognostic value beyond established risk stratification parameters., Clinical Trials.gov: NCT00712101 and NCT01612312., (Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2019. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
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71. Atrial mechanics and their prognostic impact in Takotsubo syndrome: a cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging study.
- Author
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Backhaus SJ, Stiermaier T, Lange T, Chiribiri A, Uhlig J, Freund A, Kowallick JT, Gertz RJ, Bigalke B, Villa A, Lotz J, Hasenfuß G, Thiele H, Eitel I, and Schuster A
- Subjects
- Aged, Case-Control Studies, Electrocardiography, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Heart Atria diagnostic imaging, Heart Atria physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy diagnostic imaging, Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy physiopathology
- Abstract
Aims: The exact pathophysiology of Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) remains not fully understood with most studies focussing on ventricular pathology. Since atrial involvement may have a significant role, we assessed the diagnostic and prognostic potential of atrial cardiovascular magnetic resonance feature tracking (CMR-FT) in TTS., Methods and Results: This multicentre study recruited 152 TTS patients who underwent CMR on average within 3 days after hospitalization. Reservoir [total strain εs and peak positive strain rate (SR) SRs], conduit (passive strain εe and peak early negative SRe), and booster pump function (active strain εa and peak late negative SRa) were assessed in a core laboratory. Results were compared with 21 control patients with normal biventricular function. A total of 20 patients underwent follow-up CMR (median 3.5 months, interquartile range 3-5). All patients were approached for general follow-up. Left atrial (LA) but not right atrial (RA) reservoir and conduit function were impaired during the acute phase (εs: P = 0.043, εe: P < 0.001, SRe: P = 0.047 vs. controls) and recovered until follow-up (εs: P < 0.001, SRs: P = 0.04, εe: P = 0.001, SRe: P = 0.04). LA and RA booster pump function were increased in the acute setting (LA-εa: P = 0.045, SRa: P = 0.002 and RA-εa: P = 0.004, SRa: P = 0.002 vs. controls). LA-εs predicted mortality [hazard ratio 1.10, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01-1.20; P = 0.037] irrespectively of established cardiovascular risk factors (P = 0.019, multivariate analysis) including left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (area under the curve 0.71, 95% CI 0.55-0.86, P = 0.048)., Conclusion: TTS pathophysiology comprises transient impairments in LA reservoir and conduit functions and enhanced bi-atrial active booster pump functions. Atrial CMR-FT may evolve as a superior marker of adverse events over and above established parameters such as LVEF and atrial volume., (Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2019. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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