Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of two free-breathing late gadolinium-enhanced cardiovascular magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) techniques (two-dimensional segmented navigator-gated [NAV-LGE] and single-shot [SS-LGE]) by comparing with breath-hold LGE-CMR (BH-LGE) as reference.
Methods: A total of 200 consecutive patients underwent the three LGE-CMR imaging techniques. BH patterns were assessed with dynamic navigator MR imaging. Image quality was graded on a 5-point scale (4=optimal; 0=not assessable). In patients with sufficient BH capability (diaphragmatic movement with a deviation of <3mm), hyperenhancement was scored with a 5-point scale, and global infarct size (%left ventricle) was quantified.
Results: Compared to free-breathing LGE-CMR, BH-LGE had higher image quality grade in patients with sufficient BH capability (P<0.01 [vs. NAV-LGE]; P<0.001 [vs. SS-LGE]) but poorer image quality in patients with insufficient BH capability (P<0.001 [vs. NAV-LGE]; P<0.01 [vs. SS-LGE]). NAV-LGE had higher sensitivity for infarct detection than SS-LGE (97.1% vs. 88.4%, P<0.05), but specificity was not significantly different (97.3% vs. 94.7%, P=0.37). By Bland-Altman analysis, the average differences in global infarct size were 0.4% and 1.2%, and the limits of agreement were ± 4.0% and ± 5.9% for NAV- and SS-LGE, respectively.
Conclusions: Although both NAV- and SS-LGE improve the image quality in patients with insufficient BH capability, NAV-LGE is superior to SS-LGE in infarct detection and infarct size measurement. NAV-LGE can be a possible first-line technique for patients with inability to perform sufficient BH.
Keywords: BH; CMR; Free-breathing; LGE; LV; Late gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging; MI; Myocardial infarction; NAV; Navigator-gated; SDNR; SI; SNR; SS; Single-shot; breath-hold; cardiovascular magnetic resonance; late gadolinium-enhanced; left ventricle/ventricular; myocardial infarction; navigator-gated; signal difference-to‐noise ratio; signal intensity; signal-to-noise ratio; single-shot.
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