Molecular magnetic resonance imaging of atrial clots in a swine model

Circulation. 2005 Jul 19;112(3):396-9. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.104.529941. Epub 2005 Jul 11.

Abstract

Background: The detection and differentiation of intracardiac masses is still challenging and may include neoplasms and thrombi. The aim of this study was the investigation of a targeted, fibrin-specific contrast agent (EP-2104R) for molecular targeted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of left atrial clots.

Methods and results: Chronic human thrombi were surgically implanted in the left atrial appendage of 5 swine. Molecular MRI was performed with a navigator-gated, free-breathing, cardiac-triggered 3D inversion-recovery, black-blood, gradient-echo sequence before and after systemic administration of 4 micromol/kg EP-2104R. MR images were analyzed by 2 investigators, and the contrast-to-noise ratio was calculated. Location of clots was confirmed by autopsy, and the gadolinium concentration in the clots was assessed. Before contrast agent administration, thrombi were not visible on black-blood MR images. After contrast administration, all atrial clots (n=5) were selectively visualized as white spots with a high contrast-to-noise ratio (clot/blood, 29.7+/-8.0). The gadolinium concentration in the clots averaged 74+/-45 micromol/L.

Conclusions: The fibrin-specific MR contrast agent EP-2104R allows for selective and high-contrast visualization of left atrial clots by means of molecular targeted MRI.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Heart Atria*
  • Heart Diseases / diagnosis*
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Models, Animal
  • Swine
  • Thrombosis / diagnosis*