Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2861964 | The American Journal of Cardiology | 2006 | 6 Pages |
Clinical use of cardiac computed tomography is rapidly expanding, and its purpose may reach beyond noninvasive coronary angiography. We investigated the ability of 64-slice multidetector computed tomography to differentiate between recent and long-standing myocardial infarction (MI). Contrast-enhanced coronary computed tomographic (CT) scans (Siemens Sensation 64) of patients with a recent MI (<7 days, n = 16), long-standing MI (>12 months, n = 13), and no MI (n = 13) were retrospectively evaluated. To anticipate transmural variation of myocardial perfusion and to neutralize image noise, a series of thin, overlapping slices was created in parallel alignment to the myocardial wall. Within each of these slices, a small region of interest was placed at a constant in-plane position to measure the CT attenuation (Hounsfield units [HU]) at consecutive transmural locations of injured and normal remote myocardium. In addition, wall thickness and the myocardial cavity were measured. Significantly lower CT attenuation values were found in patients with long-standing MI (−13 ± 37 HU) than in those with acute MI (26 ± 26HU) and normal controls (73 ± 14 HU, p <0.001). The attenuation difference between infarcted and remote myocardia was larger in patients with long-standing MI than in patients with recent MI (89 ± 41 and 55 ± 33 HU, respectively, p <0.001). In addition, long-standing MI was associated with wall thinning (p <0.01), and ventricular dilation (p <0.05), whereas recent MI was not (p >0.05). In conclusion, recent and long-standing MIs may be differentiated by computed tomography based on myocardial CT attenuation values and ventricular dimensions.