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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Pharmacological stress, rest perfusion and delayed enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance identifies very early cardiac involvement in systemic sclerosis patients of recent onset

Antonio GennarelliRoberto GiacomelliAlessandra SplendianiFrancesco CarubbiCarlo MasciocchiPaola Di BenedettoVasiliki LiakouliPaola CiprianiGiuliana GugginoGanna D. RadchenkoFrancesco CicciaErnesto Di CesarePiero RuscittiGiovanni TrioloAlessandra Di SibioOnorina Berardicurti

subject

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdenosineHeart diseaseHeart DiseasesVasodilator AgentsContrast MediaMagnetic Resonance Imaging CineAsymptomaticCardiac magnetic resonance imaging with pharmacological stress; Myocardial perfusion defect; Systemic sclerosis; Systemic sclerosis heart involvement; Rheumatology030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciencesMyocardial perfusion imagingCoronary circulation0302 clinical medicineRheumatologyPredictive Value of TestsInternal medicineCoronary CirculationCardiac magnetic resonance imaging with pharmacological stressMultidetector Computed TomographymedicineHumans030203 arthritis & rheumatologyScleroderma Systemicmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryMicrocirculationMyocardial Perfusion Imagingmedicine.diseaseRheumatologymyocardial perfusion defectSettore MED/16 - Reumatologiamedicine.anatomical_structureEarly DiagnosisVentriclecardiac magnetic resonance imaging with pharmacological streAsymptomatic Diseasessystemic sclerosis heart involvementSystemic sclerosisFemaleRadiologymedicine.symptombusinessPerfusionsystemic sclerosiRheumatism

description

Objective To evaluate occult cardiac involvement in asymptomatic systemic sclerosis (SSc) patients by pharmacological stress, rest perfusion and delayed enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), for a very early identification of patients at higher risk of cardiac-related mortality. Methods Sixteen consecutive patients with definite SSc, fulfilling the American College of Rheumatology/European League Against Rheumatism 2013 classification criteria in less than 1 year from the onset of Raynaud's phenomenon, underwent pharmacological stress, rest perfusion and delayed enhancement CMR. At enrollment, no patient showed signs and/or symptoms suggestive for cardiac involvement. No patient showed traditional cardiovascular risk factors. Both the 12-lead electrocardiogram examination and echocardiographic evaluation did not show any alterations in our cohort. Results Stress perfusion defects of left ventricle were detected in six out of 16 (37.5%) patients and these defects did not match with the coronary flow distribution. The results showed the presence of two different patterns of stress perfusion defects: sub-endocardial and/or a midmyocardial. The presence of stress perfusion defects did not correlate with any clinical feature of enrolled patients. Conclusion Myocardial stress perfusion defects may be detected early by pharmacological stress perfusion CMR, a reliable and sensitive technique for the noninvasive evaluation of SSc heart disease, in patients with SSc of recent onset. These defects seem to be independent from traditional risk factors and associated comorbidities, suggesting they are a specific hallmark of the disease.

10.1111/1756-185x.13107http://hdl.handle.net/10447/245722