Quantitative evaluation of coronary stenosis by coronary magnetic resonance angiography

Coronary magnetic resonance angiography (coronary MRA) can detect, noninvasively, a high proportion of severe stenotic lesions found on coronary angiograms. However, quantitative evaluation of coronary artery stenosis by coronary MRA has been performed only in a small number of patients. This study...

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Published inHeart and vessels Vol. 15; no. 4; pp. 159 - 166
Main Authors Watanuki, A, Yoshino, H, Udagawa, H, Yokoyama, K, Nitatori, T, Hachiya, J, Ishikawa, K
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Japan Springer Nature B.V 01.01.2000
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Summary:Coronary magnetic resonance angiography (coronary MRA) can detect, noninvasively, a high proportion of severe stenotic lesions found on coronary angiograms. However, quantitative evaluation of coronary artery stenosis by coronary MRA has been performed only in a small number of patients. This study was designed to determine whether coronary MRA can assess the degree of stenosis using the two-dimensional segmented turbo-FLASH method (2D method). We studied 108 patients with technically adequate coronary MRA images. The blood flow signal intensity on coronary MRA was classified as markedly decreased, moderately decreased, or normal. The severity of coronary artery stenosis was determined by the caliper method, and coronary stenosis was rated using a seven-point scale (0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 90%, 99%, and 100%) in accordance with the American Heart Association classification system. Patients were classified into three groups: normal coronary artery (0%-25% stenosis), moderate stenosis (50%-75% stenosis), and severe stenosis (90%-100% stenosis). The degree of stenosis on coronary angiography and the decrease in coronary MRA signal intensity were compared. The right coronary artery was evaluated in 64 patients and the left coronary artery in 73 patients. When a marked or moderate decrease in coronary MRA blood flow signal intensity was defined as indicating stenosis, the sensitivity and specificity of coronary MRA for detecting angiographically severe stenosis were 85% and 80%, respectively. A moderate decrease in coronary MRA blood flow signal intensity detected angiographically moderate stenoses with a sensitivity of 38% and a specificity of 83%. Coronary MRA can detect a high proportion of severe stenoses but only a low proportion of moderate stenoses. Technical improvements are required before coronary MRA can be used clinically.
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ISSN:0910-8327
1615-2573
DOI:10.1007/s003800070017