43 results on '"Flewitt J"'
Search Results
2. Endografting of the Descending Thoracic Aorta Increases Ascending Aortic Input Impedance and Attenuates Pressure Transmission in Dogs
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Dobson, G., Flewitt, J., Tyberg, J.V., Moore, R., and Karamanoglu, M.
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- 2006
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3. Value of baseline clinical and CMR characteristics for the prediction of cancer therapeutics-related cardiac dysfunction: results from the Cardiotoxicity Prevention Research Initiative (CAPRI)
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Labib, D, primary, Dykstra, S, additional, Slavikova, Z, additional, Feuchter, P, additional, Rivest, S, additional, Flewitt, J, additional, Howarth, A, additional, Heydari, B, additional, Lydell, C, additional, Clarke, B, additional, Kolman, L, additional, Pituskin, E, additional, Cheung, W, additional, Lee, J, additional, and White, J.A, additional
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- 2020
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4. Development and validation of a risk model for the prediction of cardiovascular hospital admission using CMR-based phenotype in patients with known or suspected cardiovascular disease
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Lei, L, primary, Dykstra, S, additional, Cornhill, A, additional, Labib, D, additional, Mikami, Y, additional, Satriano, A, additional, Flewitt, J, additional, Feutcher, P, additional, Howarth, A, additional, Heydari, B, additional, Merchant, N, additional, Lydell, C, additional, Lee, J, additional, Quan, H, additional, and White, J.A, additional
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- 2020
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5. 4941Machine learning based automated diagnosis of ischemic vs non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy using 3D myocardial deformation analysis
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Lei, L, primary, Satriano, A, additional, Magyar-Ng, M, additional, Mikami, Y, additional, Kalmady, S V, additional, Hoehn, B, additional, Dykstra, S, additional, Heydari, B, additional, Flewitt, J, additional, Merchant, N, additional, Howarth, A G, additional, Lydell, C P, additional, Greiner, R, additional, Fine, N M, additional, and White, J A, additional
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- 2019
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6. INFLUENCE OF DISEASE PHENOTYPE ON THE ACCURACY OF EJECTION FRACTION TO ESTIMATE CONTRACTILE PERFORMANCE: ASSESSMENT BY MULTI-DIRECTIONAL 3D GLOBAL AXIS-DEPENDENT AND PRINCIPAL STRAIN ANALYSIS
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Satriano, A., primary, Lei, L., additional, Sarim-Afzal, M., additional, Mikami, Y., additional, Flewitt, J., additional, Sandonato, R., additional, Grant, A., additional, Merchant, N., additional, Howarth, A., additional, Lydell, C., additional, Heydari, B., additional, Fine, N., additional, and White, J., additional
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- 2019
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7. 4179Feasibility and validation of routine CMR-based phenotyping for the prediction of heart failure admission or death in patients with systolic dysfunction
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Cornhill, A, primary, Dykstra, S, additional, Mikami, Y, additional, Flewitt, J, additional, Seib, M, additional, Yee, K, additional, Faris, P, additional, Hansen, R, additional, Lydell, C, additional, Howarth, A, additional, Heydari, B, additional, and White, J, additional
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- 2019
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8. DIAGNOSTIC YIELD OF CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE (CMR) SCREENING FOR ARRHYTHMOGENIC RIGHT VENTRICULAR CARDIOMYOPATHY (ARVC) STRATIFIED BY BASELINE ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY FINDINGS OF THE RIGHT VENTRICLE
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Leclerc, F., primary, Dykstra, S., additional, Flewitt, J., additional, Seib, M., additional, Mikami, Y., additional, Heydari, B., additional, Lydell, C., additional, Howarth, A., additional, and White, J., additional
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- 2018
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9. REPLACEMENT MYOCARDIAL FIBROSIS IS PREVALENT IN NEW-ONSET NON-ISCHEMIC CARDIOMYOPATHY AND IDENTIFIES DIFFERENTIAL REMODELING OF THE LEFT AND RIGHT VENTRICLES
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Mikami, Y., primary, Satriano, A., additional, Hansen, R., additional, Seib, M., additional, Dykstra, S., additional, Flewitt, J., additional, Dobko, G., additional, Sandonato, R., additional, Rivest, S., additional, Lydell, C., additional, Heydari, B., additional, Fine, N., additional, Howarth, A., additional, and White, J., additional
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- 2018
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10. IMPACT OF CHEMOTHERAPY EXPOSURE ON RIGHT VENTRICULAR CONTRACTILE FUNCTION: A 12-MONTH SERIAL EVALUATION BY CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
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Hansen, R., primary, Satriano, A., additional, Chartrain, J., additional, Mikami, Y., additional, Flewitt, J., additional, Howarth, A., additional, Lydell, C., additional, Heydari, B., additional, McMeekin, J., additional, Stewart, D., additional, Clarke, B., additional, Fine, N., additional, and White, J., additional
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- 2018
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11. PREDICTIVE VALUE OF CMR MARKERS FOR EDEMA AND NECROSIS IN ACUTE MYOCARDITIS FOR FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AT 1 YEAR
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Hansen, R., primary, Mikami, Y., additional, Rivest, S., additional, Flewitt, J., additional, Lydell, C., additional, Heydari, B., additional, Fine, N., additional, Merchant, N., additional, Friedrich, M., additional, White, J., additional, and Howarth, A., additional
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- 2017
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12. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AGE AND DIASTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE TO CHANGES IN MYOCARDIAL OXYGENATION AS ASSESSED BY CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE
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Luu, J., primary, Schmidt, A., additional, Flewitt, J., additional, Mikami, Y., additional, Keurs, H ter, additional, and Friedrich, M., additional
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- 2014
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13. Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Detection of Early Cardiotoxicity and Skeletal Muscle Abnormalities in Survivors of Childhood Cancer
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Mah, JC, primary, Zvaigzne, CG, additional, Reynolds, K, additional, Flewitt, J, additional, Chow, K, additional, Thompson, RB, additional, Howarth, AG, additional, and Patton, DJ, additional
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- 2013
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14. Breathing manoeuvre-dependent changes in myocardial oxygenation in healthy humans
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Guensch, D. P., primary, Fischer, K., additional, Flewitt, J. A., additional, Yu, J., additional, Lukic, R., additional, Friedrich, J. A., additional, and Friedrich, M. G., additional
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- 2013
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15. 191 Regional Gradient of Blood Oxygen Level Dependant Cardiovascular MR (BOLD-CMR) in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: A Comparative Study With Fractional Flow Reserve
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Luu, J., primary, Flewitt, J., additional, and Friedrich, M., additional
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- 2012
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16. 582 Change in myocardial oxygenation during mild hypo- and hypercapnia: A blood oxygen level dependent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (BOLD-CMR) study in healthy volunteers
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Guensch, D., primary, Flewitt, J., additional, Fischer, K., additional, and Friedrich, M., additional
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- 2011
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17. Transmural variations of vasodilator-induced changes of myocardial oxygenation vary with age and the presence of diabetes mellitus type II: a study using oxygen-sensitive cardiovascular MR
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Luu Judy, Schmidt Anna, Flewitt Jacqueline, Howarth Andrew G, and Friedrich Matthias G
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2013
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18. T2-dependent errors in MOLLI T1 values: simulations, phantoms, and in-vivo studies
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Chow Kelvin, Flewitt Jacqueline, Pagano Joseph J, Green Jordin D, Friedrich Matthias G, and Thompson Richard B
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2012
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19. Non-invasive monitoring of blood gas-induced changes of myocardial oxygenation using oxygen-sensitive CMR
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Guensch Dominik P, Fischer Kady, Flewitt Jacqueline, Yu Janelle, Lukic Ryan, Friedrich Julian A, and Friedrich Matthias G
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2012
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20. Characterization of myocardial T1 and partition coefficient as a function of time after gadolinium delivery in healthy subjects
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Friedrich Matthias G, Green Jordin D, Flewitt Jacqueline A, Chow Kelvin, and Thompson Richard B
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2011
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21. Cine-EPI can be used to detect coronary artery stenoses in canines
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Tyberg John V, Zuehlsdorff Sven, Flewitt Jacqueline A, Voehringer Matthias, Green Jordin D, and Friedrich Matthias G
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2009
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22. Assessment of transmural perfusion effect with Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging (BOLD-CMR)
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Friedrich Matthias, Green Jordin, Vöhringer Matthias, and Flewitt Jacqueline
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2009
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23. 240 Blood oxygen-sensitive ssfp imaging for probing the myocardial perfusion reserves of patients with coronary artery disease: a feasibility study
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Filipchuk Neil G, Voehringer Matthias, Flewitt Jacqueline, Green Jordin, Dharmakumar Rohan, Li Debiao, and Friedrich Matthias G
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Published
- 2008
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24. Oxygenation-sensitive CMR for assessing vasodilator-induced changes of myocardial oxygenation
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Wang Jiun, Dharmakumar Rohan, Green Jordin D, Flewitt Jacqueline A, Vöhringer Matthias, Tyberg John V, and Friedrich Matthias G
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background As myocardial oxygenation may serve as a marker for ischemia and microvascular dysfunction, it could be clinically useful to have a non-invasive measure of changes in myocardial oxygenation. However, the impact of induced blood flow changes on oxygenation is not well understood. We used oxygenation-sensitive CMR to assess the relations between myocardial oxygenation and coronary sinus blood oxygen saturation (SvO2) and coronary blood flow in a dog model in which hyperemia was induced by intracoronary administration of vasodilators. Results During administration of acetylcholine and adenosine, CMR signal intensity correlated linearly with simultaneously measured SvO2 (r2 = 0.74, P < 0.001). Both SvO2 and CMR signal intensity were exponentially related to coronary blood flow, with SvO2 approaching 87%. Conclusions Myocardial oxygenation as assessed with oxygenation-sensitive CMR imaging is linearly related to SvO2 and is exponentially related to vasodilator-induced increases of blood flow. Oxygenation-sensitive CMR may be useful to assess ischemia and microvascular function in patients. Its clinical utility should be evaluated.
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- 2010
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25. Prognostic Value of Late Gadolinium Enhancement for the Prediction of Cardiovascular Outcomes in Dilated Cardiomyopathy
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Gianfranco Sinagra, Heather J. Ross, Stuart D. Katz, David Alonso-Rodriguez, Paaladinesh Thavendiranathan, Pablo Pazos-López, James A. White, Rafael Vidal-Perez, Victor Vallejo-García, Steven Dykstra, Jacqueline Flewitt, Maria Vazquez-Caamaño, Juan Gaztanaga, Farid Foroutan, Manuel Barreiro-Pérez, Esther Perez-David, Jeanne E. Poole, Cecilia Corros-Vicente, Lars Køber, Ana C. Alba, Michael E. Farkouh, José Ángel Pérez-Rivera, Marco Merlo, Alba, A. C., Gaztanaga, J., Foroutan, F., Thavendiranathan, P., Merlo, M., Alonso-Rodriguez, D., Vallejo-Garcia, V., Vidal-Perez, R., Corros-Vicente, C., Barreiro-Perez, M., Pazos-Lopez, P., Perez-David, E., Dykstra, S., Flewitt, J., Perez-Rivera, J. A., Vazquez-Caamano, M., Katz, S. D., Sinagra, G., Kober, L., Poole, J., Ross, H., Farkouh, M. E., and White, J. A.
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Cardiomyopathy, Dilated ,Male ,Canada ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gadolinium ,Contrast Media ,chemistry.chemical_element ,death ,fibrosis ,gadolinium ,mortality ,prognosis ,Time ,Cohort Studies ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging ,Fibrosis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Late gadolinium enhancement ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Heart ,Dilated cardiomyopathy ,Middle Aged ,Image Enhancement ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,United States ,Patient Outcome Assessment ,Increased risk ,Italy ,chemistry ,Spain ,Cardiology ,Female ,fibrosi ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cardiovascular outcomes - Abstract
Background: Dilated cardiomyopathy is associated with increased risk of major cardiovascular events. Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is a unique tissue-based marker that, in single-center studies, suggests strong prognostic value. We retrospectively studied associations between LGE presence and adverse cardiovascular events in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy in a multicenter setting as part of an emerging global consortium (MINICOR [Multi-Modal International Cardiovascular Outcomes Registry]). Methods: Consecutive patients with dilated cardiomyopathy referred for cardiac magnetic resonance (2000–2017) at 12 institutions in 4 countries were studied. Using multivariable Cox proportional hazard and semiparametric Fine and Gray models, we evaluated the association between LGE and the composite primary end point of all-cause mortality, heart transplantation, or left ventricular assist device implant and a secondary arrhythmic end point of sudden cardiac death or appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shock. Results: We studied 1672 patients, mean age 56±14 years (29% female), left ventricular ejection fraction 33±11%, and 25% having New York Heart Association class III to IV; 650 patients (39%) had LGE. During 2.3 years (interquartile range, 1.0–4.3) follow-up, 160 patients experienced the primary end point, and 88 experienced the arrhythmic end point. In multivariable analyses, LGE was associated with 1.5-fold (hazard ratio, 1.45 [95% CI, 1.03–2.04]) risk of the primary end point and 1.8-fold (hazard ratio, 1.82 [95% CI, 1.20–3.06]) risk of the arrhythmic end point. Primary end point risk was increased in patients with multiple LGE patterns, although arrhythmic risk was higher among patients receiving primary prevention implantable cardioverter-defibrillator and widening QRS. Conclusions: In this large multinational study of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, the presence of LGE showed strong prognostic value for identification of high-risk patients. Randomized controlled trials evaluating LGE-based care management strategies are warranted.
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- 2020
26. Sex-based differences in the phenotypic expression and prognosis of idiopathic non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy: a cardiovascular magnetic resonance study.
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Mallabone M, Labib D, Abdelhaleem A, Dykstra S, Thompson RB, Paterson DI, Thompson SK, Hasanzadeh F, Mikami Y, Rivest S, Flewitt J, Feng Y, Macdonald M, King M, Bristow M, Kolman L, Howarth AG, Lydell CP, Miller RJH, Fine NM, and White JA
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Sex Factors, Aged, Stroke Volume physiology, Registries, Retrospective Studies, Cardiomyopathies diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathies physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Phenotype
- Abstract
Aims: We sought to characterize sex-related differences in cardiovascular magnetic resonance-based cardiovascular phenotypes and prognosis in patients with idiopathic non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy (NICM)., Methods and Results: Patients with NICM enrolled in the Cardiovascular Imaging Registry of Calgary (CIROC) between 2015 and 2021 were identified. Z-score values for chamber volumes and function were calculated as standard deviation from mean values of 157 sex-matched healthy volunteers, ensuring reported differences were independent of known sex-dependencies. Patients were followed for the composite outcome of all-cause mortality, heart failure admission, or ventricular arrhythmia. A total of 747 patients were studied, 531 (71%) males. By Z-score values, females showed significantly higher left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF; median difference 1 SD) and right ventricular (RV) EF (difference 0.6 SD) with greater LV mass (difference 2.1 SD; P < 0.01 for all) vs. males despite similar chamber volumes. Females had a significantly lower prevalence of mid-wall striae (MWS) fibrosis (22% vs. 34%; P < 0.001). Over a median follow-up of 4.7 years, 173 patients (23%) developed the composite outcome, with equal distribution in males and females. LV EF and MWS were significant independent predictors of the outcome (respective HR [95% CI] 0.97 [0.95-0.99] and 1.6 [1.2-2.3]; P = 0.003 and 0.005). There was no association of sex with the outcome., Conclusion: In a large contemporary cohort, NICM was uniquely expressed in females vs. males. Despite similar chamber dilation, females demonstrated greater concentric remodelling, lower reductions in bi-ventricular function, and a lower burden of replacement fibrosis. Overall, their prognosis remained similar to male patients with NICM., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: J.A.W. receives funding from the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), receives research support from Siemens Healthineers, and is a shareholder of Cohesic Inc. A.G.H. receives consulting fees from Amgen and is a shareholder of Cohesic Inc. J.F. is a shareholder of Cohesic Inc. R.J.H.M. has received research support and consulting fees from Pfizer., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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27. Prognostic Utility of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance-Based Phenotyping in Patients With Muscular Dystrophy.
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Kashyap N, Nikhanj A, Labib D, Prosia E, Rivest S, Flewitt J, Pfeffer G, Bakal JA, Siddiqi ZA, Coulden RA, Thompson R, White JA, and Oudit GY
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- Adult, Humans, Female, Male, Prognosis, Contrast Media, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Gadolinium, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Ventricular Function, Left, Stroke Volume, Fibrosis, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Myotonic Dystrophy, Heart Diseases
- Abstract
Background The prognostic utility of cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging, including strain analysis and tissue characterization, has not been comprehensively investigated in adult patients with muscular dystrophy. Methods and Results We prospectively enrolled 148 patients with dystrophinopathies (including heterozygotes), limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, and type 1 myotonic dystrophy (median age, 36.0 [interquartile range, 23.0-50.0] years; 51 [34.5%] women) over 7.7 years in addition to an age- and sex-matched healthy control cohort (n=50). Cardiovascular magnetic resonance markers, including 3-dimensional strain and fibrosis, were assessed for their respective association with major adverse cardiac events. Our results showed that markers of contractile performance were reduced across all muscular dystrophy groups. In particular, the dystrophinopathies cohort experienced reduced left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction and high burden of replacement fibrosis. Patients with type 1 myotonic dystrophy showed a 26.8% relative reduction in LV mass with corresponding reduction in chamber volumes. Eighty-two major adverse cardiac events occurred over a median follow-up of 5.2 years. Although LV ejection fraction was significantly associated with major adverse cardiac events (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 3.0 [95% CI, 1.4-6.4]) after adjusting for covariates, peak 3-dimensional strain amplitude demonstrated greater predictive value (minimum principal amplitude: aHR, 5.5 [95% CI, 2.5-11.9]; maximum principal amplitude: aHR, 3.3 [95% CI, 1.6-6.8]; circumferential amplitude: aHR, 3.4 [95% CI, 1.6-7.2]; longitudinal amplitude: aHR, 3.4 [95% CI, 1.7-6.9]; and radial strain amplitude: aHR, 3.0 [95% CI, 1.4-6.1]). Minimum principal strain yielded incremental prognostic value beyond LV ejection fraction for association with major adverse cardiac events (change in χ
2 =13.8; P <0.001). Conclusions Cardiac dysfunction is observed across all muscular dystrophy subtypes; however, the subtypes demonstrate distinct phenotypic profiles. Myocardial deformation analysis highlights unique markers of principal strain that improve risk assessment over other strain markers, LV ejection fraction, and late gadolinium enhancement in this vulnerable patient population.- Published
- 2023
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28. Normative healthy reference values for global and segmental 3D principal and geometry dependent strain from cine cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.
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Guzzardi DG, White JA, Labib D, Dykstra S, Flewitt J, Feuchter P, Sandonato R, Howarth AG, Lydell CP, Fine NM, Greiner R, and Satriano A
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- Female, Male, Animals, Reference Values, Predictive Value of Tests, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Reproducibility of Results, Ventricular Function, Left, Heart
- Abstract
3-Dimensional (3D) myocardial deformation analysis (3D-MDA) enables novel descriptions of geometry-independent principal strain (PS). Applied to routine 2D cine cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), this provides unique measures of myocardial biomechanics for disease diagnosis and prognostication. However, healthy reference values remain undefined. This study describes age- and sex-stratified reference values from CMR-based 3D-MDA, including 3D PS. One hundred healthy volunteers were prospectively recruited following institutional ethics approval and underwent CMR imaging. 3D-MDA was performed using validated software. Age- and sex-stratified global and segmental strain measures were derived for conventional geometry-dependent [circumferential (CS), longitudinal (LS), and radial (RS)] and geometry-independent [minimum (minPS) and maximum principal (maxPS)] directions of deformation. Layer-specific contraction angle interactions were determined using local minPS vectors. The average age was 43 ± 15 years and 55% were women. Strain measures were higher in women versus men. 3D PS-based assessment of maximum tissue shortening (minPS) and maximum tissue thickening (maxPS) were greater than corresponding geometry-dependent markers of LS and RS, consistent with improved representation of local tissue deformations. Global maxPS amplitude best discriminated both age and sex. Segmental analyses showed greater strain amplitudes in apical segments. Transmural PS contraction angles were higher in females and showed a heterogeneous distribution across segments. In this study we provided age and sex-based reference values for 3D strain from CMR imaging, demonstrating improved capacity for 3D PS to document maximal local tissue deformations and to discriminate age and sex phenotypes. Novel markers of layer-specific strain angles from 3D PS were also described., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.)
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- 2023
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29. Natural History of Myocardial Injury After COVID-19 Vaccine-Associated Myocarditis.
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Mustafa Alhussein M, Rabbani M, Sarak B, Dykstra S, Labib D, Flewitt J, Lydell CP, Howarth AG, Filipchuck N, Kealey A, Colbert J, Guron N, Kolman L, Merchant N, Bandali M, Bristow M, and White JA
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- Humans, Male, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Female, COVID-19 Vaccines adverse effects, Contrast Media, Gadolinium, Convalescence, Ventricular Function, Left, Stroke Volume, Predictive Value of Tests, Fibrosis, RNA, Messenger, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Myocardium pathology, mRNA Vaccines, Myocarditis diagnosis, Myocarditis etiology, Myocarditis pathology, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Heart Injuries
- Abstract
Background: Acute myocarditis is a rare complication of mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccination. Little is known about the natural history of this complication., Methods: Baseline and convalescent (≥ 90 days) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging assessments were performed in 20 consecutive patients meeting Updated Lake Louise Criteria for acute myocarditis within 10 days of mRNA-based vaccination. CMR-based changes in left ventricular volumes, mass, ejection fraction (LVEF), markers of tissue inflammation (native T1 and T2 mapping), and fibrosis (late gadolinium enhancement [LGE] and extracellular volume [ECV]) were assessed between baseline and convalescence. Cardiac symptoms and clinical outcomes were captured., Results: Median age was 23.1 years (range 18-39 years), and 17 (85%) were male. Convalescent evaluations were performed at a median (IQR) 3.7 (3.3-6.2) months. The LVEF showed a mean 3% absolute improvement, accompanied by a 7% reduction in LV end-diastolic volume and 5% reduction in LV mass (all P < 0.015). Global LGE burden was reduced by 66% (P < 0.001). Absolute reductions in global T2, native T1, and ECV of 2.1 ms, 58 ms, and 2.9%, repectively, were documented (all P ≤ 0.001). Of 5 patients demonstrating LVEF ≤ 50% at baseline, all recovered to above this threshold in convalescence. A total of 18 (90%) patients showed persistence of abnormal LGE although mean fibrosis burden was < 5% of LV mass in 85% of cases. No patient experienced major clinical outcomes., Conclusions: COVID-19 mRNA vaccine-associated myocarditis showed rapid improvements in CMR-based markers of edema, contractile function, and global LGE burden beyond 3 months of recovery in this young patient cohort. However, regional fibrosis following edema resolution was commonly observed, justifying need for ongoing surveillance., (Copyright © 2022 Canadian Cardiovascular Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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30. Machine learning prediction of atrial fibrillation in cardiovascular patients using cardiac magnetic resonance and electronic health information.
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Dykstra S, Satriano A, Cornhill AK, Lei LY, Labib D, Mikami Y, Flewitt J, Rivest S, Sandonato R, Feuchter P, Howarth AG, Lydell CP, Fine NM, Exner DV, Morillo CA, Wilton SB, Gavrilova ML, and White JA
- Abstract
Background: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a commonly encountered cardiac arrhythmia associated with morbidity and substantial healthcare costs. While patients with cardiovascular disease experience the greatest risk of new-onset AF, no risk model has been developed to predict AF occurrence in this population. We hypothesized that a patient-specific model could be delivered using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) disease phenotyping, contextual patient health information, and machine learning., Methods: Nine thousand four hundred forty-eight patients referred for CMR imaging were enrolled and followed over a 5-year period. Seven thousand, six hundred thirty-nine had no prior history of AF and were eligible to train and validate machine learning algorithms. Random survival forests (RSFs) were used to predict new-onset AF and compared to Cox proportional-hazard (CPH) models. The best performing features were identified from 115 variables sourced from three data domains: (i) CMR-based disease phenotype, (ii) patient health questionnaire, and (iii) electronic health records. We evaluated discriminative performance of optimized models using C-index and time-dependent AUC (tAUC)., Results: A RSF-based model of 20 variables (CIROC-AF-20) delivered an overall C-index of 0.78 for the prediction of new-onset AF with respective tAUCs of 0.80, 0.79, and 0.78 at 1-, 2- and 3-years. This outperformed a novel CPH-based model and historic AF risk scores. At 1-year of follow-up, validation cohort patients classified as high-risk of future AF by CIROC-AF-20 went on to experience a 17.3% incidence of new-onset AF, being 24.7-fold higher risk than low risk patients., Conclusions: Using phenotypic data available at time of CMR imaging we developed and validated the first described risk model for the prediction of new-onset AF in patients with cardiovascular disease. Complementary value was provided by variables from patient-reported measures of health and the electronic health record, illustrating the value of multi-domain phenotypic data for the prediction of AF., Competing Interests: Authors JW, AH, and JF each contributed to development of the novel software platform that is now supported by Cohesic Inc., and hold equity (shares) in this company. Author JW is the Chief Medical Officer of Cohesic Inc. Author JW has received research funding from Siemens Healthineers, Circle Cardiovascular Inc., and Pfizer Inc. Author AH has received funding from Amgen. Author SD receives funding from Alberta Innovates. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Dykstra, Satriano, Cornhill, Lei, Labib, Mikami, Flewitt, Rivest, Sandonato, Feuchter, Howarth, Lydell, Fine, Exner, Morillo, Wilton, Gavrilova and White.)
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- 2022
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31. Influence of Sex-Based Differences in Cardiac Phenotype on Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence in Patients Undergoing Pulmonary Vein Isolation.
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Yakimenka A, Labib D, Dykstra S, Mikami Y, Satriano A, Flewitt J, Feuchter P, Rivest S, Howarth AG, Lydell CP, Quinn FR, Wilton SB, and White JA
- Abstract
Background: Pulmonary vein isolation (PVI) is a commonly engaged therapy for symptomatic atrial fibrillation (AF). Prior studies have documented elevated AF recurrence rates among females vs. males. Sex-specific mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are poorly understood. This prospective cohort study aimed to evaluate the sex-based differences in cardiac phenotype and their influence on (AF) recurrence following first-time PVI., Methods: A total of 204 consecutive patients referred for first-time PVI and 101 healthy subjects were prospectively studied by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging. Multi-chamber volumetric and functional measures were assessed by sex-corrected Z-score analyses vs. healthy subjects. Patients were followed for a median of 2.6 years for the primary outcome of clinical AF recurrence. Multivariable analyses adjusting for age and comorbidities were performed to identify independent predictors of AF recurrence., Results: AF recurrence following first PVI occurred in 41% of males and 59% of females ( p = 0.03). Females were older with higher prevalence of hypertension and thyroid disorders. Z-score-based analyses revealed significantly reduced ventricular volumes, greater left atrial (LA) volumes, and reduced LA contractility in females vs. males. Multivariable analysis revealed each of LA minimum and pre-systolic volumes and booster EF Z-scores to be independently associated with AF recurrence, providing respective hazard ratios of 1.10, 1.19, and 0.89 ( p = 0.001, 0.03, and 0.01)., Conclusion: Among patients referred for first time PVI, females were older and demonstrated significantly poorer LA contractile health vs. males, the latter independently associated with AF recurrence. Assessment of LA contractile health may therefore be of value to identify female patients at elevated risk of AF recurrence. Factors influencing female patient referral for PVI at more advanced stages of atrial disease warrant focused investigation., Competing Interests: JW received funding from the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), received research support from Siemens Healthineers, and was a shareholder of Cohesic Inc. AH received consulting fees from Amgen and was a shareholder of Cohesic Inc. JF was a shareholder of Cohesic Inc. SW received funding from CIHR, received grant funding from Abbott, Boston Scientific, and Medtronic Canada, and consulting fees from Arca Biopharma (all unrelated to this work). The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Yakimenka, Labib, Dykstra, Mikami, Satriano, Flewitt, Feuchter, Rivest, Howarth, Lydell, Quinn, Wilton and White.)
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- 2022
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32. Machine Learning Patient-Specific Prediction of Heart Failure Hospitalization Using Cardiac MRI-Based Phenotype and Electronic Health Information.
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Cornhill AK, Dykstra S, Satriano A, Labib D, Mikami Y, Flewitt J, Prosio E, Rivest S, Sandonato R, Howarth AG, Lydell C, Eastwood CA, Quan H, Fine N, Lee J, and White JA
- Abstract
Background: Heart failure (HF) hospitalization is a dominant contributor of morbidity and healthcare expenditures in patients with systolic HF. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is increasingly employed for the evaluation of HF given capacity to provide highly reproducible phenotypic markers of disease. The combined value of CMR phenotypic markers and patient health information to deliver predictions of future HF events has not been explored. We sought to develop and validate a novel risk model for the patient-specific prediction of time to HF hospitalization using routinely reported CMR variables, patient-reported health status, and electronic health information., Methods: Standardized data capture was performed for 1,775 consecutive patients with chronic systolic HF referred for CMR imaging. Patient demographics, symptoms, Health-related Quality of Life, pharmacy, and routinely reported CMR features were provided to both machine learning (ML) and competing risk Fine-Gray-based models (FGM) for the prediction of time to HF hospitalization., Results: The mean age was 59 years with a mean LVEF of 36 ± 11%. The population was evenly distributed between ischemic (52%) and idiopathic non-ischemic cardiomyopathy (48%). Over a median follow-up of 2.79 years (IQR: 1.59-4.04) 333 patients (19%) experienced HF related hospitalization. Both ML and competing risk FGM based models achieved robust performance for the prediction of time to HF hospitalization. Respective 90-day, 1 and 2-year AUC values were 0.87, 0.83, and 0.80 for the ML model, and 0.89, 0.84, and 0.80 for the competing risk FGM-based model in a holdout validation cohort. Patients classified as high-risk by the ML model experienced a 34-fold higher occurrence of HF hospitalization at 90 days vs. the low-risk group., Conclusion: In this study we demonstrated capacity for routinely reported CMR phenotypic markers and patient health information to be combined for the delivery of patient-specific predictions of time to HF hospitalization. This work supports an evolving migration toward multi-domain data collection for the delivery of personalized risk prediction at time of diagnostic imaging., Competing Interests: JW, AH, and JF were shareholders in Cohesic Inc. JW has received research funding from Siemens Healthineers, Circle Cardiovascular Inc., Pfizer Inc. AH received funding from Amgen. JW was Chief Medical Officer of Cohesic Inc. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Cornhill, Dykstra, Satriano, Labib, Mikami, Flewitt, Prosio, Rivest, Sandonato, Howarth, Lydell, Eastwood, Quan, Fine, Lee and White.)
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- 2022
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33. Mid-wall striae fibrosis predicts heart failure admission, composite heart failure events, and life-threatening arrhythmias in dilated cardiomyopathy.
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Purmah Y, Cornhill A, Lei LY, Dykstra S, Mikami Y, Satriano A, Labib D, Flewitt J, Rivest S, Sandonato R, Seib M, Howarth AG, Lydell CP, Heydari B, Merchant N, Bristow M, Kolman L, Fine NM, and White JA
- Subjects
- Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Image Enhancement, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Myocardium pathology, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated pathology, Fibrosis complications, Fibrosis pathology, Heart Failure etiology, Heart Failure pathology
- Abstract
Heart failure (HF) admission is a dominant contributor to morbidity and healthcare costs in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Mid-wall striae (MWS) fibrosis by late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging has been associated with elevated arrhythmia risk. However, its capacity to predict HF-specific outcomes is poorly defined. We investigated its role to predict HF admission and relevant secondary outcomes in a large cohort of DCM patients. 719 patients referred for LGE MRI assessment of DCM were enrolled and followed for clinical events. Standardized image analyses and interpretations were conducted inclusive of coding the presence and patterns of fibrosis observed by LGE imaging. The primary clinical outcome was hospital admission for decompensated HF. Secondary heart failure and arrhythmic composite endpoints were also studied. Median age was 57 (IQR 47-65) years and median LVEF 40% (IQR 29-47%). Any fibrosis was observed in 228 patients (32%) with MWS fibrosis pattern present in 178 (25%). At a median follow up of 1044 days, 104 (15%) patients experienced the primary outcome, and 127 (18%) the secondary outcome. MWS was associated with a 2.14-fold risk of the primary outcome, 2.15-fold risk of the secondary HF outcome, and 2.23-fold risk of the secondary arrhythmic outcome. Multivariable analysis adjusting for all relevant covariates, inclusive of LVEF, showed patients with MWS fibrosis to experience a 1.65-fold increased risk (95% CI 1.11-2.47) of HF admission and 1-year event rate of 12% versus 7% without this phenotypic marker. Similar findings were observed for the secondary outcomes. Patients with LVEF > 35% plus MWS fibrosis experienced similar event rates to those with LVEF ≤ 35%. MWS fibrosis is a powerful and independent predictor of clinical outcomes in patients with DCM, identifying patients with LVEF > 35% who experience similar event rates to those with LVEF below this conventionally employed high-risk phenotype threshold., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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34. Right ventricular insertion site fibrosis in a dilated cardiomyopathy referral population: phenotypic associations and value for the prediction of heart failure admission or death.
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Mikami Y, Cornhill A, Dykstra S, Satriano A, Hansen R, Flewitt J, Seib M, Rivest S, Sandonato R, Lydell CP, Howarth AG, Heydari B, Merchant N, Fine N, and White JA
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- Adult, Aged, Contrast Media, Female, Fibrosis, Gadolinium, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Male, Middle Aged, Phenotype, Predictive Value of Tests, Referral and Consultation, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated diagnostic imaging, Heart Failure diagnostic imaging, Heart Failure etiology
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Background: Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is increasingly recognized as a heterogenous disease with distinct phenotypes on late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging. While mid-wall striae (MWS) fibrosis is a widely recognized phenotypic risk marker, other fibrosis patterns are prevalent but poorly defined. Right ventricular (RV) insertion (RVI) site fibrosis is commonly seen, but without objective criteria has been considered a non-specific finding. In this study we developed objective criteria for RVI fibrosis and studied its clinical relevance in a large cohort of patients with DCM., Methods: We prospectively enrolled 645 DCM patients referred for LGE-CMR. All underwent standardized imaging protocols and baseline health evaluations. LGE images were blindly scored using objective criteria, inclusive of RVI site and MWS fibrosis. Associations between LGE patterns and CMR-based markers of adverse chamber remodeling were evaluated. Independent associations of LGE fibrosis patterns with the primary composite clinical outcome of heart failure admission or death were determined by multivariable analysis., Results: The mean age was 56 ± 14 (28% female) with a mean left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (LVEF) of 37%. At a median of 1061 days, 129 patients (20%) experienced the primary outcome. Any abnormal LGE was present in 306 patients (47%), inclusive of 274 (42%) meeting criteria for RVI site fibrosis and 167 (26%) for MWS fibrosis. All with MWS fibrosis showed RVI site fibrosis. Solitary RVI site fibrosis was associated with higher bi-ventricular volumes [LV end-systolic volume index (78 ± 39 vs. 66 ± 33 ml/m
2 , p = 0.01), RV end-diastolic volume index (94 ± 28 vs. 84 ± 22 ml/m2 (p < 0.01), RV end-systolic volume index (56 ± 26 vs. 45 ± 17 ml/m2 , p < 0.01)], lower bi-ventricular function [LVEF 35 ± 12 vs. 39 ± 10% (p < 0.01), RV ejection fraction (RVEF) 43 ± 12 vs. 48 ± 10% (p < 0.01)], and higher extracellular volume (ECV). Patient with solitary RVI site fibrosis experienced a non-significant 1.4-fold risk of the primary outcome, increasing to a significant 2.6-fold risk when accompanied by MWS fibrosis., Conclusions: RVI site fibrosis in the absence of MWS fibrosis is associated with bi-ventricular remodelling and intermediate risk of heart failure admission or death. Our study findings suggest RVI site fibrosis to be pre-requisite for the incremental development of MWS fibrosis, a more advanced phenotype associated with greater LV remodeling and risk of clinical events.- Published
- 2021
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35. Effect of Active Cancer on the Cardiac Phenotype: A Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Based Study of Myocardial Tissue Health and Deformation in Patients With Chemotherapy-Naïve Cancer.
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Labib D, Satriano A, Dykstra S, Hansen R, Mikami Y, Guzzardi DG, Slavikova Z, Feuchter P, Flewitt J, Rivest S, Sandonato R, Lydell CP, Howarth AG, Kolman L, Clarke B, Paterson DI, Oudit GY, Pituskin E, Cheung WY, Lee J, and White JA
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Ventricles diagnostic imaging, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Humans, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasms complications, Phenotype, Retrospective Studies, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left diagnostic imaging, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left physiopathology, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Heart Ventricles drug effects, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Myocardial Contraction physiology, Myocardium pathology, Neoplasms drug therapy, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left etiology
- Abstract
Background The overlap between cancer and cardiovascular care continues to expand, with intersections emerging before, during, and following cancer therapies. To date, emphasis has been placed on how cancer therapeutics influence downstream cardiac health. However, whether active malignancy itself influences chamber volumes, function, or overall myocardial tissue health remains uncertain. We sought to perform a comprehensive cardiovascular magnetic resonance-based evaluation of cardiac health in patients with chemotherapy-naïve cancer with comparison with a healthy volunteer population. Methods and Results Three-hundred and eighty-one patients with active breast cancer or lymphoma before cardiotoxic chemotherapy exposure were recruited in addition to 102 healthy volunteers. Both cohorts underwent standardized cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging with quantification of chamber volumes, ejection fraction, and native myocardial T1. Left ventricular mechanics were incrementally assessed using three-dimensional myocardial deformation analysis, providing global longitudinal, circumferential, radial, and principal peak-systolic strain amplitude and systolic strain rate. The mean age of patients with cancer was 53.8±13.4 years; 79% being women. Despite similar left ventricular ejection fraction, patients with cancer showed smaller chambers, increased strain amplitude, and systolic strain rate in both conventional and principal directions, and elevated native T1 versus sex-matched healthy volunteers. Adjusting for age, sex, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus, the presence of cancer remained associated with these cardiovascular magnetic resonance parameters. Conclusions The presence of cancer is independently associated with alterations in cardiac chamber size, function, and objective markers of tissue health. Dedicated research is warranted to elucidate pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying these findings and to explore their relevance to the management of patients with cancer referred for cardiotoxic therapies.
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- 2021
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36. Right Ventricular Ejection Fraction for the Prediction of Major Adverse Cardiovascular and Heart Failure-Related Events: A Cardiac MRI Based Study of 7131 Patients With Known or Suspected Cardiovascular Disease.
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Purmah Y, Lei LY, Dykstra S, Mikami Y, Cornhill A, Satriano A, Flewitt J, Rivest S, Sandonato R, Seib M, Lydell CP, Howarth AG, Heydari B, Merchant N, Bristow M, Fine N, Gaztanaga J, and White JA
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- Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases physiopathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Heart Failure diagnosis, Heart Failure therapy, Heart-Assist Devices, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Heart Failure physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Registries, Stroke Volume physiology
- Abstract
Background: There is increasing evidence that right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) may provide incremental value to left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction for the prediction of major adverse cardiovascular events. To date, generalizable utility for RVEF quantification in patients with cardiovascular disease has not been established. Using a large prospective clinical outcomes registry, we investigated the prognostic value of RVEF for the prediction of major adverse cardiovascular events- and heart failure-related outcomes., Methods: Seven thousand one hundred thirty-one consecutive patients with known or suspected cardiovascular disease undergoing cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging were prospectively enrolled. Multichamber volumetric quantification was performed by standardized operational procedures. Patients were followed for the primary composite outcome of all-cause death, survived cardiac arrest, admission for heart failure, need for transplantation or LV assist device, acute coronary syndrome, need for revascularization, stroke, or transient ischemic attack. A secondary, heart failure focused outcome of heart failure admission, need for transplantation/LV assist device or death was also studied., Results: Mean age was 54±15 years. The mean LV ejection fraction was 55±14% (range 6%-90%) with a mean RVEF of 54±10% (range 9%-87%). At a median follow-up of 908 days, 870 (12%) patients experienced the primary composite outcome and 524 (7%) the secondary outcome. Each 10% drop in RVEF was associated with a 1.3-fold increased risk of the primary outcome ( P <0.001) and 1.5-fold increased risk of the secondary outcome ( P <0.001). RVEF was an independent predictor following comprehensive covariate adjustment, inclusive of LV ejection fraction. Patients with an RVEF<40% experienced a 3.1-fold risk of the primary outcome ( P <0.001) with a 1-year cumulative event rate of 22% versus 7% above this cutoff., Conclusions: RVEF is a powerful and independent predictor of major adverse cardiac events with broad generalizability across patients with known or suspected cardiovascular disease. These findings support migration towards biventricular phenotyping for the classification of risk in clinical practice. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04367220.
- Published
- 2021
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37. Neural-Network-Based Diagnosis Using 3-Dimensional Myocardial Architecture and Deformation: Demonstration for the Differentiation of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy.
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Satriano A, Afzal Y, Sarim Afzal M, Fatehi Hassanabad A, Wu C, Dykstra S, Flewitt J, Feuchter P, Sandonato R, Heydari B, Merchant N, Howarth AG, Lydell CP, Khan A, Fine NM, Greiner R, and White JA
- Abstract
The diagnosis of cardiomyopathy states may benefit from machine-learning (ML) based approaches, particularly to distinguish those states with similar phenotypic characteristics. Three-dimensional myocardial deformation analysis (3D-MDA) has been validated to provide standardized descriptors of myocardial architecture and deformation, and may therefore offer appropriate features for the training of ML-based diagnostic tools. We aimed to assess the feasibility of automated disease diagnosis using a neural network trained using 3D-MDA to discriminate hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) from its mimic states: cardiac amyloidosis (CA), Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD), and hypertensive cardiomyopathy (HTNcm). 3D-MDA data from 163 patients (mean age 53.1 ± 14.8 years; 68 females) with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) of known etiology was provided. Source imaging data was from cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). Clinical diagnoses were as follows: 85 HCM, 30 HTNcm, 30 AFD, and 18 CA. A fully-connected-layer feed-forward neural was trained to distinguish HCM vs. other mimic states. Diagnostic performance was compared to threshold-based assessments of volumetric and strain-based CMR markers, in addition to baseline clinical patient characteristics. Threshold-based measures provided modest performance, the greatest area under the curve (AUC) being 0.70. Global strain parameters exhibited reduced performance, with AUC under 0.64. A neural network trained exclusively from 3D-MDA data achieved an AUC of 0.94 (sensitivity 0.92, specificity 0.90) when performing the same task. This study demonstrates that ML-based diagnosis of cardiomyopathy states performed exclusively from 3D-MDA is feasible and can distinguish HCM from mimic disease states. These findings suggest strong potential for computer-assisted diagnosis in clinical practice., (Copyright © 2020 Satriano, Afzal, Sarim Afzal, Fatehi Hassanabad, Wu, Dykstra, Flewitt, Feuchter, Sandonato, Heydari, Merchant, Howarth, Lydell, Khan, Fine, Greiner and White.)
- Published
- 2020
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38. Prognostic Value of Late Gadolinium Enhancement for the Prediction of Cardiovascular Outcomes in Dilated Cardiomyopathy: An International, Multi-Institutional Study of the MINICOR Group.
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Alba AC, Gaztañaga J, Foroutan F, Thavendiranathan P, Merlo M, Alonso-Rodriguez D, Vallejo-García V, Vidal-Perez R, Corros-Vicente C, Barreiro-Pérez M, Pazos-López P, Perez-David E, Dykstra S, Flewitt J, Pérez-Rivera JÁ, Vazquez-Caamaño M, Katz SD, Sinagra G, Køber L, Poole J, Ross H, Farkouh ME, and White JA
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- Aged, Canada, Cohort Studies, Female, Heart diagnostic imaging, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Spain, Time, United States, Cardiomyopathy, Dilated diagnostic imaging, Contrast Media pharmacokinetics, Gadolinium pharmacokinetics, Image Enhancement methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Patient Outcome Assessment
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Background: Dilated cardiomyopathy is associated with increased risk of major cardiovascular events. Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance imaging is a unique tissue-based marker that, in single-center studies, suggests strong prognostic value. We retrospectively studied associations between LGE presence and adverse cardiovascular events in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy in a multicenter setting as part of an emerging global consortium (MINICOR [Multi-Modal International Cardiovascular Outcomes Registry])., Methods: Consecutive patients with dilated cardiomyopathy referred for cardiac magnetic resonance (2000-2017) at 12 institutions in 4 countries were studied. Using multivariable Cox proportional hazard and semiparametric Fine and Gray models, we evaluated the association between LGE and the composite primary end point of all-cause mortality, heart transplantation, or left ventricular assist device implant and a secondary arrhythmic end point of sudden cardiac death or appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator shock., Results: We studied 1672 patients, mean age 56±14 years (29% female), left ventricular ejection fraction 33±11%, and 25% having New York Heart Association class III to IV; 650 patients (39%) had LGE. During 2.3 years (interquartile range, 1.0-4.3) follow-up, 160 patients experienced the primary end point, and 88 experienced the arrhythmic end point. In multivariable analyses, LGE was associated with 1.5-fold (hazard ratio, 1.45 [95% CI, 1.03-2.04]) risk of the primary end point and 1.8-fold (hazard ratio, 1.82 [95% CI, 1.20-3.06]) risk of the arrhythmic end point. Primary end point risk was increased in patients with multiple LGE patterns, although arrhythmic risk was higher among patients receiving primary prevention implantable cardioverter-defibrillator and widening QRS., Conclusions: In this large multinational study of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, the presence of LGE showed strong prognostic value for identification of high-risk patients. Randomized controlled trials evaluating LGE-based care management strategies are warranted.
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- 2020
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39. Cardiovascular risk is associated with a transmural gradient of myocardial oxygenation during adenosine infusion.
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Luu JM, Schmidt A, Flewitt J, Mikami Y, Ter Keurs H, and Friedrich MG
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Coronary Angiography, Coronary Circulation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Adenosine administration & dosage, Coronary Artery Disease diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Myocardium metabolism, Oxygen metabolism
- Abstract
Aims: In patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), a transmural gradient of myocardial perfusion has been repeatedly observed, with the subendocardial layer showing more pronounced perfusion deficits. Oxygenation-sensitive cardiovascular magnetic resonance (OS-CMR) allows for monitoring transmural changes of myocardial oxygenation in vivo. We hypothesized that OS-CMR could help identify a transmural oxygenation gradient as a disease marker in patients at risk for CAD., Methods and Results: We assessed 34 patients with known CAD and 28 subjects with coronary risk factors but no evidence of significant CAD. Results were compared with 11 healthy volunteers. OS-CMR was performed at 1.5 T, applying a T2*-weighted cine steady state free precession sequence at baseline and during infusion of adenosine. A reader blinded to patient data quantified the relative change of myocardial oxygenation in OS-CMR, defined by the change of signal intensity (ΔSI%) between baseline and during adenosine infusion in the entire myocardium, the subepicardial layer, and the subendocardial layer. SI changes were homogenous throughout the myocardium in healthy subjects, whereas both, patients with risk factors only and patients with CAD, had a significantly smaller ΔSI% in the subendocardial layer than in the subendocardial layer. Both patient groups had an overall decreased ΔSI% across all layers when compared with healthy subjects (P < 0.05)., Conclusion: Even in the absence of overt CAD, cardiovascular risk factors are associated with a transmural gradient of the myocardial oxygenation response to adenosine as assessed by OS-CMR. An inducible transmural oxygenation gradient may serve as a non-invasive marker for cardiovascular risk., (Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2018. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
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40. Natural History of Myocardial Injury and Chamber Remodeling in Acute Myocarditis.
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White JA, Hansen R, Abdelhaleem A, Mikami Y, Peng M, Rivest S, Satriano A, Dykstra S, Flewitt J, Heydari B, Lydell CP, Friedrich MG, and Howarth AG
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- Acute Disease, Adult, Cohort Studies, Contrast Media, Disease Progression, Female, Gadolinium, Heart diagnostic imaging, Humans, Image Enhancement methods, Male, Prospective Studies, Heart physiopathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Myocarditis diagnostic imaging, Myocarditis physiopathology, Ventricular Remodeling physiology
- Abstract
Background: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is commonly used to diagnose acute myocarditis. However, the natural history of CMR-based tissue markers and their association with left ventricular recovery is poorly explored. We prospectively investigated the natural history of CMR-based myocardial injury and chamber remodeling over 12 months in patients with suspected acute myocarditis., Methods: One hundred patients with suspected acute myocarditis were enrolled. All underwent CMR evaluations at baseline and 12 months, inclusive of T2 and late gadolinium enhancement. Blinded quantitative analyses compared left ventricular chamber volumes, function, myocardial edema, and necrosis at each time point using predefined criteria. The predefined primary outcomes were improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction ≥10% and improvement in the indexed left ventricular end diastolic volume ≥10% at 12 months., Results: The mean age was 39.9±14.5 years (82 male) with baseline left ventricular ejection fraction of 57.1±11.2%. A total of 72 patients (72%) showed late gadolinium enhancement at baseline with 57 (57%) having any T2 signal elevation. Left ventricular volumes and EF improved significantly at 12 months. Global late gadolinium enhancement extent dropped from 8.5±9.2% of left ventricular mass to 3.0±5.2% ( P=0.0001) with prevalence of any late gadolinium enhancement dropping to 48%. Reductions in global T2 signal ratio occurred at 12 months (1.85±0.3 to 1.56±0.2; P=0.0001) with prevalence of T2 ratio ≥2.0 dropping to 7%. Neither marker provided associations with the primary outcomes., Conclusions: In clinically suspected acute myocarditis, significant reductions in tissue injury markers occur during the first 12 months of convalescence. Neither the presence nor extent of the investigated CMR-based tissue injury markers were predictive of our pre-defined function or remodeling outcomes at 12 months in this referral population.
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- 2019
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41. 3D myocardial deformation analysis from cine MRI as a marker of amyloid protein burden in cardiac amyloidosis: validation versus T1 mapping.
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Avitzur N, Satriano A, Afzal M, Narous M, Mikami Y, Hansen R, Dobko G, Flewitt J, Lydell CP, Howarth AG, Chow K, Fine NM, and White JA
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- Aged, Amyloidosis physiopathology, Biomechanical Phenomena, Cardiomyopathies physiopathology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Registries, Reproducibility of Results, Amyloidosis diagnostic imaging, Cardiomyopathies diagnostic imaging, Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Imaging, Three-Dimensional, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine methods, Myocardial Contraction, Ventricular Function, Left
- Abstract
Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is a significant contributor to heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and is appreciating expanding therapeutic options. Non-invasive tools aimed at accurate identification and surveillance of therapeutic response are of immediate and expanding need. While native and post-contrast T1 mapping quantify expansion of the extra-cellular compartment from amyloid protein deposition, 3D strain analysis of non-contrast cine images offers unique advantages relevant to high prevalence of renal insufficiency in this population and reduced dependency on field strength, pulse sequence, and vendor implementation. We aimed to evaluate global and segmental associations between 3D strain and T1 mapping in patients with cardiac amyloidosis. Twenty consecutive patients with confirmed CA were recruited and underwent a standardized cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging protocol at 3 T including using multi-planar cine imaging and T1 mapping using a shortened modified look-locker inversion recovery sequence. T1 mapping was performed pre- and (when permitted by renal function) post-contrast and measured for segmental T1 values. Spatially-matched 3D strain-based measures were similarly calculated. Mean left ventricular ejection fraction was 61 ± 21% (range 30-73%). Mean global native T1 was 1308 ± 96 ms. Post-contrast T1 and partition coefficient were 558 ± 104 ms and 0.85 ± 0.31, respectively. Global myocardial strain values were 8.1 ± 2.9% in the longitudinal direction, - 9.2 ± 3.4% in the circumferential direction, and 41.7 ± 22.8% in the maximum principal direction. Segmental analyses confirmed relative worsening in T1 values and reductions in strain values in the basal myocardial segments with relative sparing of the apical segments. Significant associations between T1 and strain-based measures were observed globally and segmentally, with the strongest associations found both globally and segmentally in the circumferential and minimum principal directions of deformation. This study identifies strong associations between 3D myocardial strain and T1-mapping based markers of regional amyloid protein deposition. These findings support expanded investigation of myocardial strain as a surrogate marker of response to novel therapeutic strategies in patients with cardiac amyloidosis.
- Published
- 2018
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42. Cerebral and myocardial blood flow responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia in humans.
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Beaudin AE, Brugniaux JV, Vöhringer M, Flewitt J, Green JD, Friedrich MG, and Poulin MJ
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- Adult, Blood Pressure physiology, Coronary Sinus blood supply, Female, Heart Rate physiology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Cerebral Artery physiology, Oxygen blood, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Oxyhemoglobins metabolism, Regional Blood Flow physiology, Respiratory Mechanics physiology, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial, Vasodilation physiology, Young Adult, Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology, Coronary Circulation physiology, Hypercapnia physiopathology, Hypoxia physiopathology
- Abstract
In humans, cerebrovascular responses to alterations in arterial Pco(2) and Po(2) are well documented. However, few studies have investigated human coronary vascular responses to alterations in blood gases. This study investigated the extent to which the cerebral and coronary vasculatures differ in their responses to euoxic hypercapnia and isocapnic hypoxia in healthy volunteers. Participants (n = 15) were tested at rest on two occasions. On the first visit, middle cerebral artery blood velocity (V(P)) was assessed using transcranial Doppler ultrasound. On the second visit, coronary sinus blood flow (CSBF) was measured using cardiac MRI. For comparison with V(P), CSBF was normalized to the rate pressure product [an index of myocardial oxygen consumption; normalized (n)CSBF]. Both testing sessions began with 5 min of euoxic [end-tidal Po(2) (Pet(O(2))) = 88 Torr] isocapnia [end-tidal Pco(2) (Pet(CO(2))) = +1 Torr above resting values]. Pet(O(2)) was next held at 88 Torr, and Pet(CO(2)) was increased to 40 and 45 Torr in 5-min increments. Participants were then returned to euoxic isocapnia for 5 min, after which Pet(O(2)) was decreased from 88 to 60, 52 and 45 Torr in 5-min decrements. Changes in V(P) and nCSBF were normalized to isocapnic euoxic conditions and indexed against Pet(CO(2)) and arterial oxyhemoglobin saturation. The V(P) gain for euoxic hypercapnia (%/Torr) was significantly higher than nCSBF (P = 0.030). Conversely, the V(P) gain for isocapnic hypoxia (%/%desaturation) was not different from nCSBF (P = 0.518). These findings demonstrate, compared with coronary circulation, that the cerebral circulation is more sensitive to hypercapnia but similarly sensitive to hypoxia.
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- 2011
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43. The mechanical properties of endovascular stents: an in vitro assessment.
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Johnston CR, Lee K, Flewitt J, Moore R, Dobson GM, and Thornton GM
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- Computer Simulation, Computer-Aided Design, Elastic Modulus, Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Stress, Mechanical, Blood Vessel Prosthesis, Models, Theoretical, Stents
- Abstract
Endovascular stents are commonly used to manage arterial diseases such as Aortic Abdominal Aneurysm (AAA), aortic dissection and coarctation. The radial force the stent applies to the vessel must be large enough to resist stent migration, but not so large that the mechanical stimulus initiates adverse vessel remodeling. We employed two approaches to characterize the radial force of Gianturco stents: first, by applying an external pressure to the stent and, second, by measuring the force exerted by the stent when deployed. From the second approach, we determined the force exerted at various area reductions that correspond to clinically relevant diameter oversizings. In this study, stent stiffness was determined from the force-area reduction curves. Comparing similar stents of various diameters revealed that smaller diameter stent had greater radial force and stiffness than larger diameter stents. Comparing similar stents of various lengths revealed that stents with longer lengths (and greater number of wires) has greater force and stiffness. Overlapping two stents increased the force and stiffness to values greater than the sum of those parameters for the individual stents. These data may have important clinical implications for understanding the effect of oversized and overlapped stents on vessel mechanics.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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