Objective: To determine whether CT-perfusion (CT-p) can be used to evaluate the effects of chemotherapy and anti-angiogenic treatment in patients with non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) and whether CT-p and standard therapeutic response assessment (RECIST) data obtained before and after therapy correlate. Methods: 55 patients with unresectable NSCLC underwent CT-p before the beginning of therapy and 50 of them repeated CT-p 90 days after it. Therapeutic protocol included platinum-based doublets plus bevacizumab for non-squamous carcinoma and platinum-based doublets for squamous carcinoma. RECIST measurements and calculations of blood flow (BF), blood volume (BV), time to peak (TTP) and permeability surface (PS) were performed, and baseline and post-treatment measurements were tested for statistically significant differences. Baseline and follow-up perfusion parameters were also compared based on histopathological subclassification (2004 World Health Organization Classification of Tumours) and therapy response assessed by RECIST. Results: Tumour histology was consistent with large cell carcinoma in 14/50 (28%) cases, adenocarcinoma in 22/50 (44%) cases and squamous cell carcinoma in the remaining 14/50 (28%) cases. BF and PS differences for all tumours between baseline and post-therapy measurements were significant (p50.001); no significant changes were found for BV (p50.3) and TTP (p50.1). The highest increase of BV was demonstrated in adenocarcinoma (5.2634.1%), whereas the highest increase of TTP was shown in large cell carcinoma (6.9622.4%), and the highest decrease of PS was shown in squamous cell carcinoma (221.5618.5%). A significant difference between the three histological subtypes was demonstrated only for BV (p,0.007). On the basis of RECIST criteria, 8 (16%) patients were classified as partial response (PR), 2 (4%) as progressive disease (PD) and the remaining 40 (80%) as stable disease (SD). Among PR, a decrease of both BF (1869.6%) and BV (12.669.2%) were observed; TTP increased in 3 (37.5%) cases, and PS decreased in 6 (75%) cases. SD patients showed an increase of BF, BV, TTP and PS in 6
Purpose Cardiac involvement in Systemic Sclerosis (SSc) is increasingly recognized as a mayor cause of morbidity and mortality. The aim of present study is to investigate the early stages of cardiac involvement in SSc by Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), combining the non-invasive detection of myocardial inflammation and fibrosis using T2 and T1 mapping techniques and the assessment of microcirculatory impairment through perfusion response to cold pressor test (CPT). Methods 40 SSc patients (30 females, mean age: 42.1 years) without cardiac symptoms and 10 controls underwent CMR at 1.5 T unit. CMR protocol included: native and contrast-enhanced T1 mapping, T2 mapping, T2-weighted, cineMR and late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) imaging. Microvascular function was evaluated by comparing myocardial blood flow (MBF) on perfusion imaging acquired at rest and after CPT. Native myocardial T1 and T2 relaxation times, extracellular volume fraction (ECV), T2 signal intensity ratio, biventricular volumes and LGE were assessed in each patient. Results SSc patients had significantly higher mean myocardial T1 (1029±32ms vs. 985±18ms, p<0.01), ECV (30.1±4.3% vs. 26.7±2.4%, p<0.05) and T2 (50.1±2.8ms vs. 47±1.5ms, p<0.01) values compared with controls. No significant differences were found between absolute MBF values at rest and after CPT; whereas lower MBF variation after CPT was observed in SSc patients (+33 ± 14% vs. +44 ± 12%, p<0.01). MBF variation had inverse correlation with native T1 values (r: -0.32, p<0.05), but not with ECV. Conclusions Myocardial involvement in SSc at preclinical stage increases native T1, T2 and ECV values, reflecting inflammation and fibrosis, and reduces vasodilatory response to CPT, as expression of microvascular dysfunction.
Aim: Autonomic dysfunction (AD) is an early feature of systemic sclerosis (SSc). A regular endothelial function is a prerequisite for normal response of the myocardial blood flow (MBF) to cold pressure test (CPT). The aim of the study was to evaluate the relation between MBF and AD at rest and after CPT in asymptomatic SSc patients.Methods: Twenty SSc patients and 10 age-, sex-and body mass index-matched healthy controls underwent cardiac magnetic resonance at rest and after CPT. All subjects underwent 24 hours ambulatory 3-channel electrocardiogram Holter to evaluate AD by heart rate variability. Results:We did not observe any significant difference in MBF (mL/g/min) at rest and after CPT between SSc patients and healthy controls. Delta of MBF (difference between MBF after CPT and rest MBF) was lower (P = 0.039) in SSc patients than healthy controls (0.28 [0.04-0.40] vs 0.33 [0.24-0.54]). The low frequency/high frequency (LF/HF) was higher (P = 0.002) in SSc patients than healthy controls (3 [1.7-6] vs 1.8 [1.1-2.8]). The high frequencies (HF), modulated mainly by paraympathetic system, was lower (P = 0.003) in SSc patients than healthy controls (30 [16-42] vs 36.5 ). Sympathetic hyperactivity, due to reduction of parasympathetic activity (HF), is present in SSc patients. A negative correlation was observed between Delta of MBF and LF/HF (r = −0.572, P = 0.0031).Conclusion: AD, characterized by sympathovagal imbalance due to a reduced parasympathetic tone with high LF/HF ratio, could be responsible for the reduced myocardial vasodilatory response after CPT. K E Y W O R D Sautonomic dysfunction, cardiac magnetic resonance, cardiac Raynaud's phenomenon, myocardial blood flow, systemic sclerosis
Congenital left ventricular outpouchings (LVOs) are infrequent myocardial malformations, comprising various overlapping abnormalities, whose characterization is often intricate in clinical practice using traditional non-invasive techniques. We describe a rare case of LVO associated with bicuspid aortic valve incidentally found in an asymptomatic adult patient. The LVO was located at basal level of the chamber, crescent-shaped with its largest diameter in short-axis view and presented a thin hypo-contractile wall without hyperintense areas on late gadolinium enhanced (LGE) images. This description corresponds to an overlap between usual definition of aneurism, fibrous and muscular diverticulum. The LVO was evaluated according with a classification recently proposed by Malakan Rad. In this case ventricular geometry was not respected, wall thickness was reduced and wall motion compromised therefore corresponding to a small IIc-type, which is considered having the poorest prognosis. Furthermore, the association with bicuspid aortic valve is very unusual. The patient refused surgery and preferred follow-up.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.