The Role of Multimodality Cardiac Imaging in Patients Undergoing Cancer Treatment.
Perry WengrofskyStephanie FeldmanPublished in: Current cardiology reports (2022)
Advancements in both echocardiography and emerging modalities, like cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and cardiac computed tomography, continue to improve the pre- and during therapy cardiac evaluation of cancer patients. Echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, with the incorporation of global longitudinal strain, can identify overt and subclinical cancer therapy-related cardiac dysfunction and myocarditis, and stress echocardiography and cardiac computed tomography can noninvasively screen and monitor for coronary artery disease. Multimodality cardiac imaging is an evolving and critical tool for the pre-therapy screening and risk stratification, as well as during therapy surveillance of cancer treatment-related cardiotoxicity.
Keyphrases
- left ventricular
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- coronary artery disease
- patients undergoing
- cancer therapy
- high resolution
- positron emission tomography
- heart failure
- pulmonary hypertension
- public health
- stem cells
- drug delivery
- magnetic resonance
- cardiovascular disease
- oxidative stress
- acute coronary syndrome
- mesenchymal stem cells
- aortic stenosis
- high throughput
- coronary artery bypass grafting
- heat stress