Background: Predicting sudden cardiac death risk in the first months after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) remains challenging.
Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the ability of late gadolinium enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) to identify the potentially arrhythmogenic substrate and its temporal evolution after STEMI.
Methods: One hundred consecutive patients with a first STEMI were included. Three-dimensional high-resolution LGE-CMR was obtained at 3 T on days 7 and 180. Left ventricular wall was segmented and characterized by pixel signal intensity algorithm in 5 layers from endocardium to epicardium. A 3-dimensional color-coded shell map was obtained for each layer, depicting scar core and border zone (BZ) distribution. Presence and characteristics of BZ channels were registered for each layer.
Results: At 180 days, left ventricular ejection fraction had improved significantly (from 46.7% ± 10% to 51.5% ± 10%; P <.001) and scar mass was reduced (from 22.6 ± 20 g to 13.8 ± 12 g; P <.001). Most BZ channels (89%) were identified in the same myocardial layer and American Heart Association (AHA) segment, with the same orientation and morphology in both studies. Early LGE-CMR had 96% sensitivity and 90% specificity for predicting presence of BZ channels at 180 days. Greater presence was observed in patients with no-reflow phenomenon at baseline (P = .01).
Conclusion: Most BZ channels can be identified by LGE-CMR at day 7 post-STEMI and, despite scar mass reduction, remain unaltered at 6 months, suggesting that the potentially arrhythmogenic substrate is established within the first week post-STEMI.
Keywords: Arrhythmogenic substrate; Border zone channels; Cardiac magnetic resonance; Myocardial infarction; Sudden cardiac death.
Copyright © 2017. Published by Elsevier Inc.