Echocardiographic algorithm for post-myocardial infarction LV thrombus: A gatekeeper for thrombus evaluation by delayed enhancement CMR Journal Article


Authors: Weinsaft, J. W.; Kim, J.; Medicherla, C. B.; Ma, C. L.; Codella, N. C. F.; Kukar, N.; Alaref, S.; Kim, R. J.; Devereux, R. B.
Article Title: Echocardiographic algorithm for post-myocardial infarction LV thrombus: A gatekeeper for thrombus evaluation by delayed enhancement CMR
Abstract: OBJECTIVES The goal of this study was to determine the prevalence of post-myocardial infarction (MI) left ventricular (LV) thrombus in the current era and to develop an effective algorithm (predicated on echocardiography [echo]) to discern patients warranting further testing for thrombus via delayed enhancement (DE) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). BACKGROUND LV thrombus affects post-MI management. DE-CMR provides thrombus tissue characterization and is a well-validated but an impractical screening modality for all patients after an MI. METHODS A same-day echo and CMR were performed according to a tailored protocol, which entailed uniform echo contrast (irrespective of image quality) and dedicated DE-CMR for thrombus tissue characterization. RESULTS A total of 201 patients were studied; 8% had thrombus according to DE-CMR. All thrombi were apically located; 94% of thrombi occurred in the context of a left anterior descending (LAD) infarct-related artery. Although patients with thrombus had more prolonged chest pain and larger MI (p <= 0.01), only 18% had aneurysm on echo (cine-CMR 24%). Noncontrast (35%) and contrast (64%) echo yielded limited sensitivity for thrombus on DE-CMR. Thrombus was associated with stepwise increments in basal -> apical contractile dysfunction on echo and quantitative cine-CMR; the echo-measured apical wall motion score was higher among patients with thrombus (p < 0.001) and paralleled cine-CMR decrements in apical ejection fraction and peak ejection rates (both p < 0.005). Thrombus-associated decrements in apical contractile dysfunction were significant even among patients with LAD infarction (p < 0.05). The echo-based apical wall motion score improved overall performance (area under the curve 0.89 +/- 0.44) for thrombus compared with ejection fraction (area under the curve 0.80 +/- 0.61; p = 0.01). Apical wall motion partitions would have enabled all patients with LV thrombus to be appropriately referred for DE-CMR testing (100% sensitivity and negative predictive value), while avoiding further testing in more than one-half (56% to 63%) of patients. CONCLUSIONS LV thrombus remains common, especially after LAD MI, and can occur even in the absence of aneurysm. Although DE-CMR yielded improved overall thrombus detection, apical wall motion on a noncontrast echocardiogram can be an effective stratification tool to identify patients in whom DE-CMR thrombus assessment is most warranted. (C) 2016 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.
Keywords: echocardiography; segmentation; validation; myocardial-infarction; quantification; acute; thrombus; curves; cardiovascular magnetic resonance; 2-dimensional echocardiography; cardiovascular magnetic-resonance; chamber; left ventricular; left-ventricular thrombus
Journal Title: JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging
Volume: 9
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1936-878X
Publisher: Elsevier Science, Inc.  
Date Published: 2016-05-01
Start Page: 505
End Page: 515
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000375597700001
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2015.06.017
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 26476503
PMCID: PMC5104336
Notes: Article -- Source: Wos
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  1. Nina   Kukar
    3 Kukar