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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-7241
    Keywords: magnetic resonance imaging ; acute myocardial infarction ; gadolinium ; coronary heart disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Twenty-six patients admitted to the Free University of Berlin University Hospital catheterization laboratory with acute myocardial infarction were studied. The diagnosis was confirmed by angiography, but acute revascularization was unsuccessful in every case. MR imaging was performed within 7 days of the acute event in 11 patients with uncomplicated clinical courses after acute infarction. Imaging was performed within 3 weeks in three additional cases, while the remaining 12 patients underwent studies more than 3 weeks after infarction. We determined signal intensity at three points within the area of infarction and at three other points in adjacent myocardial tissue. Decreased signal intensity within the area of infarction was found in native scans in 60% of all cases. Administration of gadolinium-DTPA 0.1 mmol/kg body weight was followed by a mean 70% increase in signal intensity within the zones of acute infarction, as compared to a 20% increase in surrounding myocardial tissue. In cases of subacute and chronic infarction, there was no significant signal enhancement after administration of gadolinium-DTPA. Uptake of the substance in the area of acute infarction may be a positive marker of acute myocardial necrosis and as such may prove useful in the clinical setting.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-7241
    Keywords: coronary artery disease ; left ventricular hypertrophy ; diastolic dysfunction ; echocardiography ; Doppler
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Diastolic dysfunction is an early sign in the temporal sequence of ischemic events in coronary heart disease. The ischemic cascade, beginning with an oxygen demand supply imbalance and metabolic alterations, identifies diastolic disorders of the left ventricle (LV) as an early phenomenon, sometimes before systolic dysfunction, electrocardiographic changes, or chest pain occur. Although the physiology of diastolic function is complex, the factors contributing to diastolic disturbances can be differentiated intointrinsic andextrinsic LV abnormalities. Intrinsic mechanisms include (a) impaired LV relaxation, (b) the complex of LV hypertrophy, and (c) increased LV asynchrony. Myocardial hypertrophy leads to an increase of the myocardial mass/volume ratio, and the degree of hypertrophy is the main determinant of chamber stiffness. The main, if not unique, determinant of myocardial diastolic tissue distensibility is the structure and concentration of the collagen. Consequently, tissue stiffness is increased in coronary disease by reparative interstitial fibrosis or scar following myocardial infarction. In myocardial hypertrophy the LV collagen concentration is elevated due to reactive fibrosis. An increase in regional asynchrony of LV contraction and relaxation is a result of regional ischemia as well as of LV hypertrophy and tissue fibrosis. Factors extrinsic to the LV causing diastolic disorders include (a) increased central blood volume, which will increase left ventricular pressure without altering the LV pressure-volume relation, and (b) ventricular interaction mediated by pericardial restraint, which may cause a parallel upward shift of the diastolic LV pressure-volume relation. Improved insight into the mechanisms of LV relaxation and filling characteristics help in the treatment of LV diastolic dysfunction.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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