Abstract
Background
Acute complete occlusion of a coronary artery results in progressive ischemia, moving from the endocardium to the epicardium (“wavefront”). Dependent on time-to-reperfusion and collateral flow, myocardial infarction (MI) will manifest, with transmural MI portending poor prognosis. Late gadolinium enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) imaging can detect MI with high diagnostic accuracy. Primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is the preferred reperfusion strategy in patients with STEMI <12 hours of symptom onset.
Purpose
We sought to visualize time-dependent necrosis in a ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) population by LGE-CMR.
Methods
STEMI patients with: single-vessel disease, complete occlusion with Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction (TIMI) score 0, absence of collateral flow (Rentrop score 0) and symptom onset <12 hours were consecutively enrolled. By LGE-CMR, area at risk (AAR) and infarct size (IS), myocardial salvage index (MSI), transmurality index, and transmurality grade (0–50%, 51–75%, 76–100%) were determined.
Results
164 patients (54±11 years, 80% male) were included. Receiver-operating-characteristic (ROC)-curve (area under the curve [AUC] = 0.81) indicating transmural necrosis revealed the best diagnostic cut-off for a symptom-to-balloon time of 121 minutes, i.e. patients with >121 minutes demonstrated increased IS, transmurality index, transmurality grade (all p-values <0.01), and decreased MSI (p<0.001) vs. patients with symptom-to-balloon times ≤121 minutes.
Conclusions
In myocardial infarction with no residual antegrade, and no collateral flow, immediate reperfusion is vital. A symptom-to-balloon time of >121 minutes causes a high grade of transmural necrosis. In the present, pure STEMI population, time to reperfusion to salvage myocardium was less than suggested by current guidelines.