Affiliation:
1. From the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions (R.J.K., J.A.C.L., S.B.R., E.A.Z.), Baltimore, Md, the University of Pennsylvania (E.-L.C.), Philadelphia, and the Feinberg Cardiovascular Research Institute (F.J.K., R.M.J.), Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Ill.
Abstract
Background
The ability of the myocyte to maintain an ionic concentration gradient is perhaps the best indication of myocardial viability. We studied the relationship of
23
Na MRI intensity to viability and explored the potential of fast-imaging techniques to reduce
23
Na imaging times in rabbits and dogs.
Methods and Results
Eighteen rabbits underwent in situ coronary artery occlusion and reperfusion. The hearts were then either imaged following isolation and perfusion with cardioplegic solution (n=6), imaged in vivo (n=6), or analyzed for
23
Na content and relaxation times (n=12). Normal rabbits (n=6) and dogs (n=4) were imaged to examine the effect of animal size on
23
Na image quality.
23
Na imaging times were 7, 11, and 4 minutes for isolated rabbits, in vivo rabbits, and in vivo dogs, respectively. Infarcted, reperfused regions, identified by triphenyltetrazolium chloride staining, showed a significant elevation in
23
Na image intensity compared with viable regions (isolated, 42±5%,
P
<.02; in vivo, 95±6%,
P
<.001), consistent with increased tissue sodium content. Similarly,
23
Na MR spectroscopy showed that [Na
+
] was higher in nonviable than viable myocardium (isolated, 99±4 versus 61±2 mmol/L; in vivo, 91±2 versus 38±1 mmol/L;
P
<.001 for both). Image signal-to-noise ratios were higher in dogs than rabbits despite shorter imaging times, primarily due to larger voxels.
Conclusions
Following acute infarction with reperfusion, a regional increase in
23
Na MR image intensity is associated with nonviable myocardium. Fast gradient-echo imaging techniques reduce
23
Na imaging times to a few minutes, suggesting that
23
Na MR imaging has the potential to become a useful experimental and clinical tool.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Reference46 articles.
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