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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Magnetic resonance microscopy and correlative histopathology of the infarcted heart

Itziar Perez-terolCésar Rios-navarroElena De DiosJosé Manuel MoralesJose Gavara DoñateNerea Perez-soleAna DiazGema MinanaRemedios Segura-sabaterClara BonanadAntoni Bayés-genísOliver HusserJosé V. MonmeneuMaría P. Lopez-lereuJulio NúñezFrancisco J. ChorroAmparo Ruiz-sauriVicente BodiDaniel MonleonUniversitat Autònoma De Barcelona

subject

medicine.medical_specialtySwineMyocardial InfarctionIschemiaCardiologylcsh:MedicineDelayed enhancement030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyArticle030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineAnimalsHumansMyocardial infarctionlcsh:ScienceAcute miMicroscopyMultidisciplinaryintegumentary systemmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMagnetic resonance microscopylcsh:RMagnetic resonance imagingDiagnostic markersmedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingDisease Models AnimalInfarcted heartlcsh:QHistopathologyNuclear medicinebusiness

description

Altres ajuts:The present study was supported by the EU Joint Programming Initiative 'A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life' (JPI HDHL INTIMIC-085), Generalitat Valenciana (GV/2018/116), INCLIVA and Universitat de Valencia (program VLC-BIOCLINIC 20-nanomIRM-2016A). Delayed enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance (MR) is the gold-standard for non-invasive assessment after myocardial infarction (MI). MR microscopy (MRM) provides a level of detail comparable to the macro objective of light microscopy. We used MRM and correlative histopathology to identify infarct and remote tissue in contrast agent-free multi-sequence MRM in swine MI hearts. One control group (n = 3 swine) and two experimental MI groups were formed: 90 min of ischemia followed by 1 week (acute MI = 6 swine) or 1 month (chronic MI = 5 swine) reperfusion. Representative samples of each heart were analysed by contrast agent-free multi-sequence (T1-weighting, T2-weighting, T2*-weighting, T2-mapping, and T2*-mapping). MRM was performed in a 14-Tesla vertical axis imager (Bruker-AVANCE 600 system). Images from MRM and the corresponding histopathological stained samples revealed differences in signal intensities between infarct and remote areas in both MI groups (p-value < 0.001). The multivariable models allowed us to precisely classify regions of interest (acute MI: specificity 92% and sensitivity 80%; chronic MI: specificity 100% and sensitivity 98%). Probabilistic maps based on MRM images clearly delineated the infarcted regions. As a proof of concept, these results illustrate the potential of MRM with correlative histopathology as a platform for exploring novel contrast agent-free MR biomarkers after MI.

https://www.fundanet.incliva.es/publicaciones/ProdCientif/PublicacionFrw.aspx?id=4111