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Circulation, Vol 69, 125-130, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
G Wesbey, CB Higgins, P Lanzer, E Botvinick and MJ Lipton
Imaging by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques has been shown to
provide high-contrast resolution between soft tissues and characterization
of normal and pathologic tissues by differences in magnetic relaxation
times. The current study was designed to determine whether
electrocardiogram (ECG)-gated NMR imaging of the canine heart in vivo could
distinguish normal from infarcted myocardium without the use of intravenous
paramagnetic contrast agents. Seven dogs were studied by ECG-gated NMR
imaging in vivo (spin-echo technique) with a 0.35 Tesla superconducting
magnet at 2 to 7 days after ligation of the left anterior descending
coronary artery. In six of the seven dogs, signal intensity was increased
in the anterior wall compared with the remainder of the left ventricle;
this region of high signal intensity corresponded to the area of myocardial
infarction demonstrated at postmortem examination. The signal intensity of
the infarcted region was 66 +/- 27% greater than that of normal myocardium
(p less than .01). The T2 (spin-spin) relaxation time was 69 +/- 3% longer
in the infarcted myocardium as compared with normal myocardium (p less than
.01). The NMR images from the seventh dog had uniform signal intensity
throughout the myocardium of the left ventricle. An infarct was not evident
on postmortem examination in this dog. Thus gated NMR imaging in vivo by
the spin-echo technique displays acute myocardial infarctions as regions of
high signal intensity without the use of contrast media. The infarct is
characterized by a prolonged T2 relaxation time.
ARTICLES
Imaging and characterization of acute myocardial infarction in vivo by gated nuclear magnetic resonance
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