Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2024)

Correlation of Non-Invasive Transthoracic Doppler Echocardiography with Invasive Doppler Wire-Derived Coronary Flow Reserve and Their Impact on Infarct Size in Patients with ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction Treated with Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention

  • Dejan Milasinovic,
  • Milorad Tesic,
  • Olga Nedeljkovic Arsenovic,
  • Ruzica Maksimovic,
  • Dragana Sobic Saranovic,
  • Dario Jelic,
  • Milorad Zivkovic,
  • Vladimir Dedovic,
  • Stefan Juricic,
  • Zlatko Mehmedbegovic,
  • Olga Petrovic,
  • Danijela Trifunovic Zamaklar,
  • Ana Djordjevic Dikic,
  • Vojislav Giga,
  • Nikola Boskovic,
  • Marija Klaric,
  • Stefan Zaharijev,
  • Lazar Travica,
  • Djordje Dukic,
  • Djordje Mladenovic,
  • Milika Asanin,
  • Goran Stankovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13092484
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 2484

Abstract

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Background: Coronary microvascular dysfunction is associated with adverse prognosis after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). We aimed to compare the invasive, Doppler wire-based coronary flow reserve (CFR) with the non-invasive transthoracic Doppler echocardiography (TTDE)-derived CFR, and their ability to predict infarct size. Methods: We included 36 patients with invasive Doppler wire assessment on days 3–7 after STEMI treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), of which TTDE-derived CFR was measured in 47 vessels (29 patients) within 6 h of the invasive Doppler. Infarct size was assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance at a median of 8 months. Results: The correlation between invasive and non-invasive CFR was modest in the overall cohort (rho 0.400, p = 0.005). It improved when only measurements in the LAD artery were considered (rho 0.554, p = 0.002), with no significant correlation in the RCA artery (rho −0.190, p = 0.435). Both invasive (AUC 0.888) and non-invasive (AUC 0.868) CFR, measured in the recanalized culprit artery, showed a good ability to predict infarct sizes ≥18% of the left ventricular mass, with the optimal cut off values of 1.85 and 1.80, respectively. Conclusions: In patients with STEMI, TTDE- and Doppler wire-derived CFR exhibit significant correlation, when measured in the LAD artery, and both have a similarly strong association with the final infarct size.

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