A comparision of oedema detection with diffusion-weighted imaging and T2-STIR imaging in patients with acute myocardial infarction
Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance ,
Jan 2013
Anna Kociemba , Magdalena Lanocha , Katarzyna Katulska , Andrzej Siniawski , Magdalena Janus , Malgorzata Pyda
A comparision of oedema detection with diffusion-weighted imaging and T2-STIR imaging in patients with acute myocardial infarction
Kociemba et al. Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic
Resonance
A comparision of oedema detection with diffusion-weighted imaging and T2-STIR imaging in patients with acute myocardial infarction
Anna Kociemba 0
Magdalena Lanocha 0
Katarzyna Katulska 0
Andrzej Siniawski 0
Magdalena Janus 0
Malgorzata Pyda 0
From 0
th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions San Francisco 0
CA 0
USA. 0
January - 0
February 0
0 I'st Department of Cardiology, University of Medical Sciences , Poznan , Poland
-
Background
The diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) is a well known
technique in neuroradiology, due to its ability to detect
ischemic regions in brain tissue. A recent, rapid
development of the magnetic resonance technology and echo
planar imaging enabled the application of diffusion imaging
in cardiac examinations.
The aim of this study was to compare the diffusion
weighted imaging with widely used STIR sequences in
the evaluation of edema in patients with acute
myocardial infarction (AMI).
Methods
The study included 71 patients with AMI 1-7 days after
infarction. MR examinations were performed on a 1.5
Tesla scanner with the use of a six-channel phased-array
body coil combined with a six-channel spine matrix coil.
STIR and DWI sequences were applied before the contrast
administration. Both sequences were acquired at the same
planes (HLA, VLA and short axis view). DW images with
b-value 50 s/mm2 was chosen because of the highest signal
intensity both in the edema region and healthy
myocardium. We have performed both qualitative and
quantitative image analysis. The qualitative analysis included the
evaluation of the quality of blood suppression, the
presence of motion artifacts and the presence of high signal
areas. Two contrast to noise ratios (CNR) were calculated.
CNR1 was the contrast between edema and healthy
myocardium and CNR2 was the contrast between edema and
intraventricular blood pool. The area of edema was
measured in both STIR and DWI sequences and compared
with the infarct size in LGE images in the same slice
position.
Results
The overall image quality was similar in both sequences.
The sensitivity was higher on DWI images (83% vs 61%),
the specificity was 90% for both sequences. There was
no difference between STIR and DWI in overall CNR1
(18.2 7.4 vs 21.4 11.5 respectively) and CNR2 (29.0
14.9 vs 31.2 20.0). CNR1 in STIR images differed
depending on the territory of infarction (21.4 7.1
anterior MI, 18.0 8.8 lateral, 15.4 6.3 inferior, p=0,04). The
area of edema was higher in DWI images (9.0 4.0cm2 vs
8,7 4.4 cm2, p=0.0031).
Conclusions
Our study confirms that DW EPI is a feasible sequence
for the myocardial edema imaging and detects high
signal areas (edema) more frequently than STIR.
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Article home page: http://www.jcmr-online.com/content/15/S1/P25
Anna Kociemba, Magdalena Lanocha, Katarzyna Katulska, Andrzej Siniawski, Magdalena Janus, Malgorzata Pyda.
A comparision of oedema detection with diffusion-weighted imaging and T2-STIR imaging in patients with acute myocardial infarction ,
Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance,
2013, pp. P25, 15,