Hearts (Aug 2024)

Comparison of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Advanced Echocardiography in Evaluation of Patients with High Burden of Premature Ventricular Contractions and Normal Standard Echocardiography

  • Oscar Wickzén,
  • Martin Sundqvist,
  • Raffaele Scorza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/hearts5030026
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
pp. 365 – 374

Abstract

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Echocardiography is recommended as a first-line diagnostic tool in patients with premature ventricular contractions (PVCs). However, standard echocardiography is not always able to identify early signs of myocardial dysfunction and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) may offer additional information. Since CMR has lower accessibility and higher cost compared to echocardiography, we wanted to evaluate how additional echocardiographic parameters, not included in routine examinations, perform compared to CMR in detecting signs of cardiomyopathy in PVC patients with normal findings at a standard echocardiogram. We compared CMR findings and results from an extended echocardiographic examination in thirty-nine patients who had a high PVC burden. The additional echocardiographic parameters were global longitudinal strain, mechanical dispersion, ventricular–arterial coupling, integrated backscatter and left atrial activation time. Eleven patients had pathological findings at CMR. The additional echocardiographic parameters did not significantly differ between patients with or without CMR findings. However, several patients with normal CMR findings showed signs of ventricular dysfunction when evaluated with the additional echocardiographic parameters, which suggests that these could possibly offer supplementary information in the assessment of PVC patients.

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