Quantitative assessment of myocardial edema using a breath-hold T2 mapping pulse sequence

  • Shah M
  • Srichai M
  • Kim D
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Abstract

Introduction: An inflammatory response to various diseases, including acute myocardial ischemia, cardiac transplantation rejection and acute myocarditis, results in water accumulation in the myocardium. Excess water accumulation results in myocardial edema, which can lead to various conditions including myocardial stiffness, diastolic dysfunction, and tissue swelling [1]. Conventional T2-weighted (T2w) MRI can be used to qualitatively (Table Presented) detect myocardial edema, but often yield non-uniform signal due to surface coil effects [2]. We propose to quantitatively detect myocardial edema using a breath-hold T2 mapping pulse sequence based on multi-echo, spin-echo (ME-SE) imaging [3]. Purpose: To quantitatively assess myocardial edema using a breath-hold, ME-SE T2 mapping pulse sequence in patients with clinical evidence of cardiac disease. Methods: We imaged 7 female patients with various types of heart disease (see Table 1 for clinical history) on a 1.5 T MR scanner (Siemens;Avanto), using both the conventional T2w and ME-SE T2 mapping pulse sequences in 3 short-axis views of the heart. The relevant imaging parameters for the T2 mapping pulse sequence are: spatial resolution = 2 mm × 2 mm × 8 mm, echo-spacing = 4.5 ms, turbo-factor = 4, number of images = 8, and breath-hold duration = 13 s. Conventional T2w images were qualitatively evaluated by a cardiologist for presence of myocardial edema. For the ME-SE data, myocardial contours were segmented manually using shortaxis planes, and the corresponding pixel-by-pixel T2 maps were calculated by non-linear least square fitting of the monoexponential relaxation curve. T2 values were averaged over the entire myocardium. The clinical reading and T2 data analysis were performed independently. For the ME-SE data, an upper limit cutoff T2 value of 62.9 ms (5 standard deviations above the mean) was chosen based on prior ME-SE data obtained from a control group [3]. The accuracy of quantitative detection of myocardial edema was correlated with qualitative evaluation. Results: Figure 1 shows T2w images and corresponding T2 maps from a patient diagnosed with myocardial edema compared to those from a patient without edema. Three out of seven patients were diagnosed with myocardial edema based on increased signal intensity on conventional T2w images and based on increased T2(Table 1). Conclusion: This study demonstrates the feasibility of quantitatively detecting myocardial edema using a breath-hold ME-SE T2 mapping pulse sequence. Clinical evaluation for myocardial edema is challenging with conventional T2w imaging due to surface coil effects and lack of a normal myocardium reference signal. Future directions for this research include correlating increased T2 values with specific cardiac conditions and evaluating the clinical utility of this quantitative technique for assessment of myocardial edema. (Figure Presented).

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Shah, M., Srichai, M. B., & Kim, D. (2010). Quantitative assessment of myocardial edema using a breath-hold T2 mapping pulse sequence. Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 12(S1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429x-12-s1-p277

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