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Left ventricular function assessment including or excluding trabeculations in left ventricular non-compaction, a preliminary case-control cardiac magnetic resonance study.
Quantitative Imaging in Medicine and Surgery 2024 March 16
BACKGROUND: Functional assessment of compact myocardium and hypertrabeculations in left ventricular non-compaction (LVNC) is underestimated with regards to the morphological spectrum of disease. We aimed to assess whether measuring concurrently left ventricular (LV) volume, mass and ejection fraction (LVEF) with and without trabeculation inclusion on cine magnetic resonance (cineMR) could help diagnose patients with LVNC by comparison to normal individuals with an excess of myocardial trabeculations.
METHODS: This retrospective single center magnetic resonance imaging study (Bichat University Hospital) of 67 consecutive patients with echocardiographic hypertrabeculations seen at echocardiography between March 2011 and October 2018 included 30 patients with known LVNC and 16 control subjects with simple hypertrabeculations (non-compact/compact (NC/C) ratio between 1.8 and 2.2, trabeculations involving 10% to 17% of the left ventricle) using steady-state free precession (SSFP) cine sequences in the standard views. LV volumes, mass and LVEF were measured with and without trabeculation inclusion using CVI42 software. Follow-up was studied in 20 patients and 14 controls. Functional parameters were compared using Student's paired t-test. Pearson product moment correlation coefficients were calculated. Bland-Altman analysis determined the inter- and intra-reader functional data reproducibility.
RESULTS: When excluding the trabeculations (i.e. non-compacted myocardium) from measurements, LVEF was within normal ranges both in patients and controls, while it increased by 9.8%±1.6% in LVNC and decreased by 10.9%±1.4% in controls when trabeculae were included in the endocardial contours (P<0.0001). The overall myocardial mass remained stable according to the diastolic or systolic phase in LVNC whereas it significantly decreased in controls.
CONCLUSIONS: Depending whether trabeculations were included or not, LVEF measurements were significantly different between patients with LVNC and controls. These distinctive measurements might be used as an adjunctive clinical tool to help confirm the diagnosis of LVNC.
METHODS: This retrospective single center magnetic resonance imaging study (Bichat University Hospital) of 67 consecutive patients with echocardiographic hypertrabeculations seen at echocardiography between March 2011 and October 2018 included 30 patients with known LVNC and 16 control subjects with simple hypertrabeculations (non-compact/compact (NC/C) ratio between 1.8 and 2.2, trabeculations involving 10% to 17% of the left ventricle) using steady-state free precession (SSFP) cine sequences in the standard views. LV volumes, mass and LVEF were measured with and without trabeculation inclusion using CVI42 software. Follow-up was studied in 20 patients and 14 controls. Functional parameters were compared using Student's paired t-test. Pearson product moment correlation coefficients were calculated. Bland-Altman analysis determined the inter- and intra-reader functional data reproducibility.
RESULTS: When excluding the trabeculations (i.e. non-compacted myocardium) from measurements, LVEF was within normal ranges both in patients and controls, while it increased by 9.8%±1.6% in LVNC and decreased by 10.9%±1.4% in controls when trabeculae were included in the endocardial contours (P<0.0001). The overall myocardial mass remained stable according to the diastolic or systolic phase in LVNC whereas it significantly decreased in controls.
CONCLUSIONS: Depending whether trabeculations were included or not, LVEF measurements were significantly different between patients with LVNC and controls. These distinctive measurements might be used as an adjunctive clinical tool to help confirm the diagnosis of LVNC.
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