Circulation, Vol 89, 2133-2140, Copyright © 1994 by American Heart Association
JC Hsu, GA Johnson, WM Smith, KA Reimer and RE Ideker
BACKGROUND: In post-myocardial infarction patients, three-dimensional
structure of the infarct as well as infarct size are likely to be important
factors affecting mortality, cardiac function, and arrhythmias. Current
morphological methods for determining three- dimensional infarct structure
in autopsied hearts are inexact and time consuming. The cardiac magnetic
resonance imaging techniques used in living patients have shown potential
in determining infarct size and structure but have limited resolution for
morphometric postmortem studies. The recent development of magnetic
resonance microscopy raises the possibility that three-dimensional infarct
structure can be quantified at microscopic levels in autopsied hearts. The
purpose of this study was to determine the ability of magnetic resonance
imaging at different spatial resolutions to differentiate infarcted from
noninfarcted myocardium. METHODS AND RESULTS: Magnetic resonance imaging
was performed at 2.0 T on cross sections taken from 10 autopsied hearts
containing old myocardial infarcts. T1 was derived from six images with
repetition times (TRs) for each image ranging from 100 to 3200
milliseconds. T2 was derived from multi-echo images with echo times (TEs)
ranging from 10 to 60 milliseconds. Resolution was approximately 400 x 400
microns in 2-mm-thick slices. Sites of infarcted and noninfarcted tissue
were identified from histological sections taken from each slice, and the
T1 and T2 values of these sites were obtained. Microscopic images were
acquired with voxels of 100 x 100 x 625 microns, representing tissue
volumes more than 1000-fold smaller than conventional clinical images. In
all cases, T1 of infarcted tissue (459 +/- 266 milliseconds, mean +/- SD)
was greater than that of noninfarcted tissue (272 +/- 163 milliseconds).
Also, in all cases, T2 of infarcted tissue (49 +/- 14 milliseconds) was
greater than that of noninfarcted tissue (35 +/- 8 milliseconds).
CONCLUSIONS: T1 and T2 values for infarcted tissue are significantly
different from those of noninfarcted tissue (P < .001). Based on these
findings, it should be possible to develop techniques to perform
three-dimensional imaging and quantitation of infarcts with a resolution of
400 microns or less. When volumetric three-dimensional imaging was
performed using a T1-weighted sequence, the resulting 256(3) arrays
supported isotropic resolution at 400 microns (voxel volume, 0.064 mm3).
Subsequent volume rendering using a compositing algorithm clearly shows the
infarcted areas in three dimensions. The techniques demonstrate the
potential for quantitative three-dimensional cardiac morphometry using
magnetic resonance imaging.
ARTICLES
Magnetic resonance imaging of chronic myocardial infarcts in formalin- fixed human autopsy hearts
Department of Pathology, Duke University School of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710.
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