RSNA 2011 

Abstract Archives of the RSNA, 2011


SSC01-01

Right Ventricular Involvement in Acute Left Ventricular Myocardial Infarction: Prognostic Implications of Cardiac MRI Findings

Scientific Formal (Paper) Presentations

Presented on November 28, 2011
Presented as part of SSC01: Cardiac (Myocardial Infarction)

Participants

Thomas W. Schlosser MD, Presenter: Nothing to Disclose
Christoph Jensen, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose
Oliver Bruder, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose
Kai Nassenstein, Abstract Co-Author: Nothing to Disclose

PURPOSE

The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence and prognostic importance of the cardiac MRI finding of right ventricular involvement in patients with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (MI).

METHOD AND MATERIALS

Fifty patients (41 men, nine women; mean age, 58 +/- 11 years) with first-ST-segment elevation MI underwent 1.5-T cardiac MRI immediately after successful percutaneous coronary intervention. The cardiac MRI protocol included steady-state free precession cine sequences for functional assessment of the left, right, and both ventricles and inversion recovery FLASH delayed enhancement sequences after contrast administration for the quantification of myocardial damage. The prevalence of right ventricular involvement detected with ECG and echocardiography was compared with the prevalence detected with cardiac MRI, which was the reference standard. Patients underwent follow-up for 32 +/- 8 months.

RESULTS

Right ventricular involvement was diagnosed with cardiac MRI in 27 patients (54%): 14 of 30 patients (47%) with inferior ST-segment elevation MI and 13 of 20 patients (65%) with anterior ST-segment elevation MI. ECG and echocardiographic findings showed only moderate agreement with cardiac MRI findings in the detection of right ventricular involvement in inferior acute MI (kappa = 0.38). Patients with right ventricular involvement in anterior ST-segment elevation MI had larger infarcts (delayed enhancement, 25.9% +/- 14.5% vs 11.4% +/- 10.1%; p = 0.030), lower left ventricular ejection fraction (34.3% +/- 8.2% vs 45.2% +/- 9.5%; p < 0.015), and lower right ventricular ejection fraction (39.8% +/- 6.6% vs 54.9% +/- 8.8%; p < 0.001) than those without right ventricular involvement. In a multivariate logistic regression model, right ventricular involvement was a strong independent predictor (odds ratio, 15.8; 95% CI, 4-63%) of major cardiac adverse events.

CONCLUSION

Right ventricular involvement in ST-segment elevation MI is detected more frequently with cardiac MRI than with ECG and echocardiography and is an independent prognostic indicator.

CLINICAL RELEVANCE/APPLICATION

Delayed enhancement in the right ventricle adds important prognostic information and may refine medical management beyond current standards.

Cite This Abstract

Schlosser, T, Jensen, C, Bruder, O, Nassenstein, K, Right Ventricular Involvement in Acute Left Ventricular Myocardial Infarction: Prognostic Implications of Cardiac MRI Findings.  Radiological Society of North America 2011 Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, November 26 - December 2, 2011 ,Chicago IL. http://archive.rsna.org/2011/11004899.html