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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Oxygenation-sensitive CMR for assessing vasodilator-induced changes of myocardial oxygenation.

Journal:
Journal of cardiovascular magnetic resonance : official journal of the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
Year:
2010
Authors:
Vöhringer, Matthias et al.
Affiliation:
Stephenson Cardiovascular MR Centre at the Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta · Canada
Species:
dog

Abstract

BACKGROUND: As myocardial oxygenation may serve as a marker for ischemia and microvascular dysfunction, it could be clinically useful to have a non-invasive measure of changes in myocardial oxygenation. However, the impact of induced blood flow changes on oxygenation is not well understood. We used oxygenation-sensitive CMR to assess the relations between myocardial oxygenation and coronary sinus blood oxygen saturation (SvO2) and coronary blood flow in a dog model in which hyperemia was induced by intracoronary administration of vasodilators. RESULTS: During administration of acetylcholine and adenosine, CMR signal intensity correlated linearly with simultaneously measured SvO2 (r2 = 0.74, P < 0.001). Both SvO2 and CMR signal intensity were exponentially related to coronary blood flow, with SvO2 approaching 87%. CONCLUSIONS: Myocardial oxygenation as assessed with oxygenation-sensitive CMR imaging is linearly related to SvO2 and is exponentially related to vasodilator-induced increases of blood flow. Oxygenation-sensitive CMR may be useful to assess ischemia and microvascular function in patients. Its clinical utility should be evaluated.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20356402/