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Experimental Biology and Medicine 226:367-376 (2001)
© 2001 Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine


MINIREVIEW

New Concepts in Characterization of Ischemically Injured Myocardium by MRI

Maythem Saeed1,

Department of Radiology, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143

New concepts regarding the assessment of ischemic myocardial injuries have been addressed in this Minireview using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRI, with its different techniques, brings not only anatomic, but also physiologic, information on ischemic heart disease. It has the ability to measure identical parameters in preclinical and clinical studies. MRI techniques provide the ideal package for repeated and noninvasive assessment of myocardial anatomy, viability, perfusion, and function. MR contrast agents can be applied in a variety of ways to improve MRI sensitivity for detecting and assessing ischemically injured myocardium. With MR contrast agents protocol, it becomes possible to identify ischemic, acutely infarcted, and peri-infarcted myocardium in occlusive and reperfused infarctions. Necrosis specific and nonspecific extracellular contrast-enhanced MRI has been used to assess myocardial viability. Contrast-enhanced perfusion MRI can explore the disturbances in large (angiography) and small coronary arteries (myocardial perfusion) as the underlying cause of myocardial dysfunction. Perfusion MRI has been used to measure myocardial perfusion (ml/min/g) and to demonstrate the difference in transmural myocardial blood flow. Information on no-reflow phenomenon is derived from dynamic changes in regional signal intensity after bolus injection of MR contrast agents. Another development is the near future availability of blood pool MR contrast agents. These agents are able to assess microvascular permeability and integrity and are advantageous in MR angiography (MRA) due to their persistence in the blood. Noncontrast-enhanced MRI such as cine MRI at rest/stress, sodium MRI, and MR spectroscopy also have the potential to noninvasively assess myocardial viability in patients. Futuristic applications for MRI in the heart will focus on identifying coronary artery disease at an early stage and the beneficial effects of new therapeutic agents such as intra-arterial gene therapy. MR techniques will have great future in the drug discovery process and in testing the effects of drugs on myocardial biochemistry, physiology, and morphology. Molecular imaging is going to bloom in this decade.

Key Words: myocardial viability • myocardial injury • myocardial infarction • coronary artery disease • magnetic resonance imaging




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