19 Mantua Road, Mt. Royal, NJ 08061, U.S.A.
Phone: 856-423-8955 - Fax: 856-423-3420 - E-Mail: hq@scmr.org
MySQL: 0.0025 s, 0 request(s), PHP: 0.2240 s, total: 0.2265 s, document retrieved from cache.
© SCMR. • By BlueFigment.com
|
Case from: Rory O’ Hanlon, Sanjay Prasad, Royal Brompton Hospital, London. UK
Clinical history: A 44 yr old lady transferred for primary PCI for chest pain with lateral ST elevation. Troponin I 26, CK 1233. Normal lipids (TC:HDL 3.17). Only risk factor for IHD was hypertension: non-smoker.
Angiography: Normal coronaries, normal LVgram, normal transthoracic echo
Cine CMR: Preserved LV function but subtle focal infero-lateral hypokinesis without thinning.
Contrast CMR: Matching transmural MI with central dark microvascular obstruction*
Based on CMR, it was recommended to investigate for a potential source of paradoxical embolism and thrombophilia. The thrombophilia screen was normal.
Contrast Echo: (agitated saline): A large PFO was visualized with complete opacification of the LV cavity within one cycle on Valsalva.
Result:
1. Percutaneous closure of PFO was performed based on clinical presentation and presumed diagnosis of MI secondary to paradoxical embolism
2. CMR in this case made a significant contribution to establishing a diagnosis and directing relevant subsequent investigations.
3. Imaging modalities are complementary: LV angiography and echo may miss subtle RWMA, CMR would not easily detect a PFO.
*MVO, The often found dark core of an acute MI caused by capillary occlusion – the tissue equivalent of ‘no-reflow’
Download this as a powerpoint slide here