6533b7d5fe1ef96bd1264984
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Kardiale MRT : Änderungen der normalisierten myokardialen Gadolinium-Anreicherung über die Zeit nach Kontrastmittelinjektion in Patienten mit akuter Myokarditis und gesunden Probanden
Buhr CStefan MaderwaldThomas SchlosserKai NassensteinRaimund ErbelJoerg BarkhausenF BreuckmannOliver Brudersubject
AdultGadolinium DTPAMalemedicine.medical_specialtymedia_common.quotation_subjectGadoliniumCardiac-Gated Imaging TechniquesMedizinchemistry.chemical_elementContrast MediaSensitivity and SpecificityPharmacokineticsReference ValuesInternal medicineHealthy volunteersmedicineImage Processing Computer-AssistedContrast (vision)HumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingIn patientMuscle Skeletalmedia_commonbusiness.industryMyocardiumWashoutSteady-state free precession imagingMiddle AgedImage EnhancementMagnetic Resonance ImagingMyocardial ContractionMyocarditischemistryContrast injectionAcute DiseaseInjections IntravenousCardiologyFemalebusinessdescription
PURPOSE An increased normalized gadolinium accumulation (NGA) in the myocardium during early washout has been used for the diagnosis of acute myocarditis (AM). Due to the fact that the pharmacokinetics of contrast agents are complex, time-related changes in NGA after contrast injection are likely. Because knowledge about time-related changes of NGA may improve the diagnostic accuracy of MR, our study aimed to estimate the time course of NGA after contrast injection in patients as well as in healthy volunteers. MATERIALS AND METHODS An ECG-triggered inversion recovery SSFP sequence with incrementally increasing inversion times was repetitively acquired over the 15 minutes after injection of 0.2 Gd-DTPA per kg body weight in a 4-chamber view in 15 patients with AM and 20 volunteers. The T 1relaxation times and the longitudinal relaxation rates (R1) of the myocardium and skeletal musculature were calculated for each point in time after contrast injection. The time course of NGA was estimated based on the linear relationship between R1 and tissue Gd concentration. RESULTS NGA decreased over time in the form of a negative power function in patients with AM and in healthy controls. NGA in AM tended to be higher than in controls (p > 0.05). CONCLUSION NGA rapidly changes after contrast injection, which must be considered when measuring NGA. Although we observed a trend towards higher NGA values in patients with AM with a maximum difference one minute after contrast injection, NGA did not allow us to differentiate patients with AM from healthy volunteers, because the observed differences did not reach a level of significance.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-08-23 |