Clinical validity of longitudinal pre-ejectional myocardial velocity for identifying the transmural extent of viable myocardium - Early after reperfusion of an infarct- related coronary artery

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Abstract

Background: Positive longitudinal pre-ejectional velocity (+PEVL) was recently reported to be a reliable index of myocardial recovery early after successful revascularization in myocardial infarction (MI); that is, it recognizes the transmural extent of viable myocardium. The applicability of PEVL in the real-world clinical setting for identifying the transmural extent of viable myocardium in reperfused recent MI was assessed. Methods and Results: Using tissue Doppler imaging, the resting basal and mid myocardial PEVLS were determined within 3 days after revascularization in 41 consecutive patients with recent MI. Infarct thickness was semi-quantified using delayed gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at baseline and at 6-month follow up to differentiate transmural from nontransmural MI. The proportion of segments showing the presence of +PEVL was not significantly changed as infarct thickness increased (p=0.2), with 66.2% having +PEVL even in segments involving >75% transmural infarction. Moreover, +PEVL was found in a large fraction of segments with akinesia (70.4%). Specificity and negative predictive value of +PEVL for assessing infarct nontransmurality were disappointingly low (32.0% and 26.9%, respectively). All of these results were not altered when the 6-month follow-up MRI was done. Conclusions: +PEVL cannot be regarded as a reliable marker for predicting the transmural extent of viable myocardium in recent MI.

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Kim, H. K., Kim, Y. J., Chang, S. A., Kim, S. Y., Jang, H. J., Lee, W., … Choi, Y. S. (2007). Clinical validity of longitudinal pre-ejectional myocardial velocity for identifying the transmural extent of viable myocardium - Early after reperfusion of an infarct- related coronary artery. Circulation Journal, 71(12), 1904–1911. https://doi.org/10.1253/circj.71.1904

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