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Single breath-hold compressed sensing real-time cine imaging to assess left ventricular motion in myocardial infarction - 28/04/21

Doi : 10.1016/j.diii.2020.11.012 
Benjamin Longère a, b, 1, Marc-Henry Chavent a, 1, Augustin Coisne b, c, Christos Gkizas a, Julien Pagniez a, Arianna Simeone a, Valentina Silvestri a, Michaela Schmidt d, Christoph Forman d, David Montaigne b, c, François Pontana a, b,
a Department of Cardiovascular Radiology, Institut Cœur-Poumon, CHU de Lille, Boulevard du Pr Jules Leclercq, 59037 Lille Cedex, France 
b INSERM UMR 1011, Institut Pasteur de Lille, EGID (European Genomic Institute for Diabetes), FR3508, Univ. Lille, 59000 Lille, France 
c Department of Clinical Physiology and Echocardiography, CHU de Lille, Lille, France 
d Siemens Healthcare GmbH, Erlangen, Germany 

Corresponding author at: Department of Cardiovascular Radiology, Institut Cœur-Poumon, CHU de Lille, Boulevard du Pr Jules Leclercq, 59037 Lille Cedex, France.Department of Cardiovascular Radiology, Institut Cœur-Poumon, CHU de LilleBoulevard du Pr Jules LeclercqLille Cedex59037France

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Highlights

Compressed sensing real-time cine sequence is a reliable sequence for myocardial infarction imaging.
Fast real-time imaging improves patient workflow in clinical CMR.
There is no clinically relevant information loss regarding wall motion disorders using compressed sensing single breath-hold real-time cine by comparison with the reference segmented multi-breath-hold cine sequence.

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Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate the reliability of a real-time compressed sensing (CS) cine sequence for the detection of left ventricular wall motion disorders after myocardial infarction in comparison with the reference steady-state free precession cine sequence.

Materials and Methods

One hundred consecutive adult patients referred for either initial work-up or follow-up by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in the context of myocardial infarction were prospectively included. There were 77 men and 23 women with a mean age of 63.12±11.3 (SD) years (range: 29–89 years). Each patient underwent the reference segmented multi-breath-hold steady-state free precession cine sequence including one short-axis stack and both vertical and horizontal long-axis slices (SSFPref) and the CS real-time single-breath-hold evaluated sequence (CSrt) providing the same slices. Wall motion disorders were independently and blindly assessed with both sequences by two radiologists, using the American Heart Association left ventricle segmentation. Paired Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to search for differences in wall motion disorders conspicuity between both sequences and receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) analysis was performed to assess the diagnosis performance of CSrt sequence using SSFPref as the reference method.

Results

Each patient had at least one cardiac segment with wall motion abnormality on SSFPref and CSrt images. The 1700 segments analyzed with SSFPref were classified as normokinetic (360/1700; 21.2%), hypokinetic (783/1700; 46.1%), akinetic (526/1700; 30.9%) or dyskinetic (31/1700; 1.8%). Sensitivity and specificity of the CS sequence were 99.6% (95% CI: 99.1–99.9%) and 99.7% (95% CI: 98.5–100%), respectively. Area under ROC of CSrt diagnosis performance was 0.997 (95% CI: 0.993–0.999).

Conclusion

CS real-time cine imaging significantly reduces acquisition time without compromising the conspicuity of left ventricular -wall motion disorders in the context of myocardial infarction.

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Keywords : Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), Compressed sensing, Coronary artery disease, Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), Myocardial infarction

Abbreviations : bSSFP, CMR, CS, LGE, LV, MI, MRI, SD, WMD


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© 2020  Société française de radiologie. Pubblicato da Elsevier Masson SAS. Tutti i diritti riservati.
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Vol 102 - N° 5

P. 297-303 - Maggio 2021 Ritorno al numero
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