Deformation imaging reliably differentiated fresh from old left ventricular thrombi (cutoff 1 s(-1)), with 94% of fresh thrombi resolving after 6 months of phenprocoumon vs 6.7% of old thrombi.
Observational (n=52)
Can deformation imaging differentiate fresh from old left ventricular thrombi and predict thrombus resolution with anticoagulation in patients post-myocardial infarction?
Deformation imaging using peak strain rate during isovolumetric relaxation can reliably differentiate fresh from old left ventricular thrombi, accurately predicting which will resolve with anticoagulation.
Absolute Event Rate: 94% vs 6.7%
BACKGROUND: Noninvasive echocardiographic differentiation between old and fresh left ventricular thrombi after myocardial infarction would be of clinical importance to estimate the risk for embolization and the necessity of anticoagulation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Fifty-two patients, aged 41 to 87 years, with a thrombus after myocardial infarction were included in this 2-part study: In substudy-I, 20 patients, 10 each with a definite diagnosis of fresh or old thrombus, were included. In the subsequent prospective substudy-II, 32 consecutive patients with an incident thrombus after myocardial infarction but unknown thrombus age were started on phenprocoumon and followed for 6 months. Data on medical history, standard echocardiography, strain-rate (SR) imaging and magnetic resonance tomography were analyzed. In substudy-I, analysis of thrombus deformation revealed the most rapid change in SR during the isovolumetric relaxation period when cavity pressure decreases rapidly. Fresh (range: 5-27 days) and old thrombi (4-26 months) could be discriminated without overlap by peak SR during the isovolumetric relaxation period, using a cutoff value of 1 s(-1). Applying this threshold value in substudy-II, 17 thrombi were echocardiographically classified as fresh (=SR ≥1 s(-1)) and 15 as old. After 6 months in the fresh thrombus group, 16 of 17 thrombi had disappeared (94%), and in 1 patient the thrombus size was diminished by >50% (now presenting an old thrombus SR pattern). In contrast, 14 of the 15 old thrombi remained unchanged in size and deformation (1 thrombus disappeared). CONCLUSIONS: Fresh and old intracavitary thrombi can be reliably differentiated by deformation imaging. In fresh thrombi, anticoagulation with phenprocoumon results in thrombus resolution in most patients.
Niemann et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Left ventricular thrombus after myocardial infarction (n=52). Deformation imaging (strain-rate imaging) and phenprocoumon vs. Old thrombi was evaluated on Thrombus resolution at 6 months. Deformation imaging reliably differentiated fresh from old left ventricular thrombi (cutoff 1 s(-1)), with 94% of fresh thrombi resolving after 6 months of phenprocoumon vs 6.7% of old thrombi.