High-resolution Free-breathing late gadolinium enhancement Cardiovascular magnetic resonance to diagnose myocardial injuries following COVID-19 infection.

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State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_D5063108744C
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
High-resolution Free-breathing late gadolinium enhancement Cardiovascular magnetic resonance to diagnose myocardial injuries following COVID-19 infection.
Journal
European journal of radiology
Author(s)
Bustin A., Sridi S., Gravinay P., Legghe B., Gosse P., Ouattara A., Rozé H., Coste P., Gerbaud E., Desclaux A., Boyer A., Prevel R., Gruson D., Bonnet F., Issa N., Montaudon M., Laurent F., Stuber M., Camou F., Cochet H.
ISSN
1872-7727 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0720-048X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
144
Pages
109960
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
High-resolution free-breathing late gadolinium enhancement (HR-LGE) was shown valuable for the diagnosis of acute coronary syndromes with non-obstructed coronary arteries. The method may be useful to detect COVID-related myocardial injuries but is hampered by prolonged acquisition times. We aimed to introduce an accelerated HR-LGE technique for the diagnosis of COVID-related myocardial injuries.
An undersampled navigator-gated HR-LGE (acquired resolution of 1.25 mm <sup>3</sup> ) sequence combined with advanced patch-based low-rank reconstruction was developed and validated in a phantom and in 23 patients with structural heart disease (test cohort; 15 men; 55 ± 16 years). Twenty patients with laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 infection associated with troponin rise (COVID cohort; 15 men; 46 ± 24 years) prospectively underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) with the proposed sequence in our center. Image sharpness, quality, signal intensity differences and diagnostic value of free-breathing HR-LGE were compared against conventional breath-held low-resolution LGE (LR-LGE, voxel size 1.8x1.4x6mm).
Structures sharpness in the phantom showed no differences with the fully sampled image up to an undersampling factor of x3.8 (P > 0.5). In patients (N = 43), this acceleration allowed for acquisition times of 7min21s ± 1min12s at 1.25 mm <sup>3</sup> resolution. Compared with LR-LGE, HR-LGE showed higher image quality (P = 0.03) and comparable signal intensity differences (P > 0.5). In patients with structural heart disease, all LGE-positive segments on LR-LGE were also detected on HR-LGE (80/391) with 21 additional enhanced segments visible only on HR-LGE (101/391, P < 0.001). In 4 patients with COVID-19 history, HR-LGE was definitely positive while LR-LGE was either definitely negative (1 microinfarction and 1 myocarditis) or inconclusive (2 myocarditis).
Undersampled free-breathing isotropic HR-LGE can detect additional areas of late enhancement as compared to conventional breath-held LR-LGE. In patients with history of COVID-19 infection associated with troponin rise, the method allows for detailed characterization of myocardial injuries in acceptable scan times and without the need for repeated breath holds.
Keywords
COVID-19, Contrast Media, Gadolinium, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Male, Predictive Value of Tests, SARS-CoV-2, Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging, High-resolution, Late Gadolinium Enhancement
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
12/10/2021 13:49
Last modification date
25/06/2024 6:38
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