Myocardial Viability Imaging using Manganese-Enhanced MRI in the First Hours after Myocardial Infarction.
Nur Hayati JasminMay Zaw ThinRobert D JohnsonLaurence H JacksonThomas A RobertsAnna L DavidMark F LythgoePhilip C YangSean M DavidsonPatrizia CamellitiDaniel J StuckeyPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2021)
Early measurements of tissue viability after myocardial infarction (MI) are essential for accurate diagnosis and treatment planning but are challenging to obtain. Here, manganese, a calcium analogue and clinically approved magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent, is used as an imaging biomarker of myocardial viability in the first hours after experimental MI. Safe Mn2+ dosing is confirmed by measuring in vitro beating rates, calcium transients, and action potentials in cardiomyocytes, and in vivo heart rates and cardiac contractility in mice. Quantitative T1 mapping-manganese-enhanced MRI (MEMRI) reveals elevated and increasing Mn2+ uptake in viable myocardium remote from the infarct, suggesting MEMRI offers a quantitative biomarker of cardiac inotropy. MEMRI evaluation of infarct size at 1 h, 1 and 14 days after MI quantifies myocardial viability earlier than the current gold-standard technique, late-gadolinium-enhanced MRI. These data, coupled with the re-emergence of clinical Mn2+ -based contrast agents open the possibility of using MEMRI for direct evaluation of myocardial viability early after ischemic onset in patients.
Keyphrases
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high resolution
- left ventricular
- magnetic resonance
- diffusion weighted imaging
- computed tomography
- heart failure
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- prognostic factors
- oxidative stress
- minimally invasive
- machine learning
- oxide nanoparticles
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- deep learning
- transition metal
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- patient reported outcomes
- photodynamic therapy
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- coronary artery disease