7 research outputs found

    CMR Assessment of endothelial damage and angiogenesis in porcine coronary arteries using gadofosveset

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Endothelial damage and angiogenesis are essential for atherosclerotic plaque development and destabilization. We sought to examine whether contrast enhanced cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) using gadofosveset could show endothelial damage and neovessel formation in balloon injured porcine coronary arteries.</p> <p>Methods and Results</p> <p>Data were obtained from seven pigs that all underwent balloon injury of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD) to induce endothelial damage and angiogenesis. Between one - 12 days (average four) after balloon injury, in vivo and ex vivo T1-weighted coronary CMR was performed after intravenous injection of gadofosveset. Post contrast, CMR showed contrast enhancement of the coronary arteries with a selective and time-dependent average expansion of the injured LAD segment area of 45% (p = 0.04; CI<sub>95 </sub>= [15%-75%]), indicating local extravasation of gadofosveset. Vascular and perivascular extravasation of albumin (marker of endothelial leakiness) and gadofosveset was demonstrated with agreement between Evans blue staining and ex vivo CMR contrast enhancement (p = 0.026). Coronary MRI contrast enhancement and local microvessel density determined by microscopic examination correlated (ρ = 0.82, p < 0.001).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Contrast enhanced coronary CMR with gadofosveset can detect experimentally induced endothelial damage and angiogenesis in the porcine coronary artery wall.</p

    Integrated shape averaging of the P-wave applied to AF risk detection

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    The recognition of patients with Atrial Fibrillation (AF) risk, from body surface ECG, remains an actual problem. The aim of the work is to investigate how the study of the P-wave morphology may assess any clustering algorithm in separating patients with AF risk from healthy subjects. The clustering is done by the k-means algorithm and using a new method: the Integrated Shape Averaging (ISA). According to the results, the method was able to separate patients with AF risk from safety ones with 75 % sensitivity and 70 % specificity on 40 recordings. Furthermore, two families of P-wave patterns were characterized among the patients with AF risk and probably corresponding to electrical manifestations of conduction defects in the left or the right atrium. 1
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