These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Morphologic correlate of pathologic Q waves as assessed by gradient-echo magnetic resonance imaging.
    Author: Baer FM, Theissen P, Voth E, Schneider CA, Schicha H, Sechtem U.
    Journal: Am J Cardiol; 1994 Sep 01; 74(5):430-4. PubMed ID: 8059720.
    Abstract:
    To assess the morphologic correlate of the presence and absence of pathologic Q waves in the electrocardiogram, 30 patients with and 17 patients without pathologic Q waves and chronic myocardial infarction (infarct age > 4 months) and 15 patients without previous myocardial infarction but significant coronary artery disease (> 70% diameter stenoses) were studied by gradient-echo magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Short-axis MRI tomograms were evaluated on a segmental basis by calculating end-diastolic wall thickness and systolic wall thickening. All segments were graded transmural scar (end-diastolic wall thickness < end-diastolic wall thickness of a healthy control group [n = 21]-2.5 SD and lack of systolic wall thickening), hypokinetic (end-diastolic wall thickness > or = end-diastolic wall thickness of the control group-2.5 SD and systolic wall thickening < or = 2 mm), or normal (end-diastolic wall thickness > or = end-diastolic wall thickness of the control group-2.5 SD and systolic wall thickening > 2 mm) by MRI criteria. Myocardial infarcts were defined as transmural if at least 1 segment fulfilled the MRI criteria for transmural scar. Of 30 patients with Q-wave infarction, 26 (87%) had a transmural defect, and 6 of 17 patients (35%) with non-Q-wave infarction had a transmural infarct. Segmental evaluation yielded 129 of 480 scar segments (27%) for patients with Q-wave infarction, 20 of 272 scar segments (7%) for patients with non-Q-wave infarction, and no scar segments for patients without previous myocardial infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]