The international journal of cardiovascular imaging
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Int J Cardiovasc Imaging · Sep 2019
Comparative StudyCT-derived left ventricular global strain: a head-to-head comparison with speckle tracking echocardiography.
We assessed CT-derived left ventricular strain in a cohort of patients referred for transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) and validated it against 2 dimensional speckle tracking echocardiography as the gold standard. 65 consecutive patients with symptomatic aortic valve stenosis referred for CT imaging prior to TAVI were included in this analysis. For all patients, retrospectively ECG-gated multi-phase functional CT data sets acquired with identical reconstruction parameters were available. All data sets were acquired using a third generation dual source system. ⋯ ROC Curve analysis assuming a normal GLS when less than -18% showed that a CT-derived peak 3-dimensional global strain cut-off-value of 45% has a sensitivity of 91% and a specificity of 60% for detecting normal left ventricular strain (AUC 0.81, p = 0.001). For CT perimeter-derived strain, a cut-off value of -12%-assuming a normal echocardiographic GLS when less than -18%-achieved a sensitivity of 82% and a specificity of 61% (AUC of 0.82, p = 0.001) for detecting abnormal left ventricular strain. Using dedicated software, assessment of CT-derived left ventricular strain is feasible and comparable to strain derived by echocardiographic 2 dimensional speckle tracking.
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Int J Cardiovasc Imaging · Sep 2019
Comparative Study Observational StudySevere loss of right ventricular longitudinal contraction occurs after cardiopulmonary bypass in patients with preserved right ventricular output.
Assessment of right ventricular (RV) function is crucial since RV failure with a reduced cardiac output (CO) is associated with compromised outcome in cardiac surgery. Echocardiographic evaluation of RV function is commonly used, but a reduction in tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) and tricuspid annulus tissue Doppler imaging (S') have been observed independently of clinical signs of RV failure. This has led to uncertainty of these variables' validity in cardiac surgery. ⋯ SV measured with 3D echocardiography correlated with PAC measured SV (r = 0.66[95% CI 0.50; 0.78], p < 0.0001), but 3D showed a minor, but statistically significant underestimation of SV (8.5 ml (95% CI 2.7 ml; 14 ml, p = 0.004). TAPSE and S' were both reduced after CPB despite maintained CO. RVFAC, RVEF and RV-GLS remained stable, however, these measures were unable to detect minor changes in SV. 3D-echocardiographyshowed a strong correlation with SV measured by thermodilution, but with a consistent underestimation of approximately 10%.
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Int J Cardiovasc Imaging · Sep 2019
Comparative StudyLow dose wall motion score predicts the short and long-term benefit of surgical revascularization in patients with ischemic left ventricular dysfunction.
We investigated the influence of the extent of viability using low dose dobutamine wall motion score index (WMS) on the survival benefit of surgical revascularization (CABG) versus medical therapy. In the STICH trial, viability assessment was not helpful in determining the benefit of CABG. However, the extent of viable myocardium with contractile function was not assessed in the trial. ⋯ In those with intermediate viability, revascularization improved both 2 year (p = 0.014) and long-term survival (p = 0.0001). In patients with limited viability, 2-year survival was worse in revascularized patients (p = 0.04) and long-term survival was similar (p = 0 .25) in revascularized and medically treated groups. Patients with extensive and intermediate amounts of viability have improved survival with CABG but those with limited viability have poorer short-term outcome and no long-term benefit.
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Int J Cardiovasc Imaging · Sep 2019
Anti-inflammatory effect of statin is continuously working throughout use: a prospective three time point 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging study.
No data exist whether statins have robust anti-inflammatory effects of atherosclerotic plaques primarily during the early treatment period or continuously throughout use. This prospective three time point 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT) study of the carotid artery assessed anti-inflammatory effects of statin during the early treatment period (initiation to 3 months) and late treatment period (3 months to 1 year) and their correlation with lipid and inflammatory profile changes during a year of therapy. Nine statin-naïve stable angina patients with inflammatory carotid plaques received 20 mg/day atorvastatin after undergoing initial 18F-FDG PET/CT scanning of carotid arteries and ascending thoracic aorta, and then completed serial 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging at 3 and 12 months whose data were analyzed. ⋯ The index vessel ΔTBR showed continuous plaque inflammation reduction over 1 year, by 4.4% (p = 0.015) from the initiation to 3rd months and 6.2% (p = 0.009) from 3rd months to 1 year, respectively, without correlation with lipid profile changes. The ΔTBR of the bilateral carotid arteries and ascending aorta also continuously decreased from 3 months to 1 year. Three time point 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging demonstrates that statin's anti-inflammatory effect continues throughout its use up to 1 year, even though yielding stable below-target plasma LDL-C levels at 3 months.