Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
The temporal evolution of ventricular trabecular complexity and its correlation with major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) remain indeterminate in patients presenting with acute ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).
Methods
This retrospective analysis enrolled patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI) for acute STEMI, possessing cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) data in the acute (within 7 days), subacute (1 month after pPCI), and chronic phases (6 months after pPCI) from January 2015 to January 2020 at the three participating sites. Fractal dimensions (FD) were measured for the global, infarct, and remote regions of left ventricular trabeculae during each phase. The potential association of FD with MACE was analyzed using multivariate Cox regression.
Results
Among the 200 analyzed patients (182 men; median age, 61 years; age range, 50–66 years), 37 (18.5%) encountered MACE during a median follow-up of 31.2 months. FD exhibited a gradual decrement (global FD at acute, subacute, and chronic phases: 1.253 ± 0.049, 1.239 ± 0.046, 1.230 ± 0.045, p < 0.0001), with a more pronounced decrease observed in patients subsequently experiencing MACE (p < 0.001). The global FD at the subacute phase correlated with MACE (hazard ratio 0.89 (0.82, 0.97), p = 0.01), and a global FD value below 1.26 was associated with a heightened risk.
Conclusion
In patients post-STEMI, the global FD, serving as an indicator of left ventricular trabeculae complexity, independently demonstrated an association with subsequent major adverse cardiovascular events, beyond factors encompassing left ventricular ejection fraction, indexed left ventricular end-diastolic volume, infarct size, heart rate, NYHA class, and post-pPCI TIMI flow.
Critical relevance statement
In patients who have had an ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, global fractal dimension, as a measure of left ventricular trabeculae complexity, provided independent association with subsequent major adverse cardiovascular event.
Key points
• Global and regional FD decreased after STEMI, and more so in patients with subsequent MACE.
• Lower global FD at the subacute phase and Δglobal FD from acute to subacute phase were associated with subsequent MACE besides clinical and CMR factors.
• Global FD at the subacute phase independently correlated with MACE and global FD value below 1.26 was associated with higher risk.
Graphical Abstract
Funder
Shanghai Jiao Tong University Medical Engineering cross fund
Shanghai Sailing Program
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National Natural Science Foundation of China Youth Project
Shanghai science and technology innovation action plan, technology standard project
Shanghai science and technology innovation action plan
Shanghai Municipal Education Commission-Gaofeng Clinical Medicine Grant
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC