Author/Authors :
Miria Neizel، نويسنده , , Mirja and Korosoglou، نويسنده , , Grigorios and Lossnitzer، نويسنده , , Dirk and Kühl، نويسنده , , Harald and Hoffmann، نويسنده , , Rainer and Ocklenburg، نويسنده , , Christina and Giannitsis، نويسنده , , Evangelos and Osman، نويسنده , , Nael F. and Katus، نويسنده , , Hugo A. and Steen، نويسنده , , Henning، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Objectives
tudy evaluated the value of systolic and diastolic deformation indexes determined by strain-encoded imaging to predict persistent severe dysfunction at follow-up in patients after reperfused acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in comparison with late gadolinium enhancement (LGE).
ound
studies suggest that regional diastolic function provides information about myocardial viability after AMI. However, data in humans are sparse.
s
-six patients underwent magnetic resonance imaging 3 ± 1 days after successfully reperfused ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction and at a follow-up of 6 months. Cine, strain-encoded, and LGE images were acquired. Peak systolic circumferential strain (Ecc) and early diastolic strain rate (Ecc/s) were calculated for each segment at baseline and at follow-up. A cutoff Ecc value of −9% was used to define severe dysfunction at follow-up.
s
l of 312 segments were analyzed; 119 segments showed abnormal baseline function. Thirty-five segments showed severe dysfunction at follow-up, which was defined as Ecc at follow-up <9%. The area under the curve for Ecc/s was 0.82 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.72 to 0.89), for Ecc 0.74 (95% CI: 0.64 to 0.83), and for LGE 0.85 (95% CI: 0.77 to 0.92). A comparison of receiver-operating characteristic curves demonstrates that LGE is not significantly different than Ecc/s but is significantly different than Ecc (p = 0.32 vs. p < 0.05) for prediction of severe dysfunction at follow-up.
sions
al diastolic function provides similar accuracy to predict persistent severe dysfunction at follow-up to LGE and is superior to regional systolic function in patients after AMI. Diastolic deformation indexes may serve as a new parameter for assessment of viability in patients after AMI. (SENC in AMI Study; NCT00752713).