New MRI Might Help Spot Heart Disease Early: Study
10/09/12
TUESDAY, Oct. 9 (HealthDay News) -- A new MRI technique is
showing "practical promise" in identifying thickening of the
coronary artery wall, an early stage of coronary heart disease,
researchers say.
The findings suggest that this technique could be used to screen
people at risk for coronary artery disease and to monitor the
effects of treatment, said the authors of the study published
online Oct. 9 in the journal
Radiology.
"We currently have no reliable way to noninvasively image coronary artery disease in its early stages, when the disease can be treated with lifestyle changes and medications to lower cholesterol," lead researcher Dr. Khaled Abd-Elmoniem, a staff scientist in the biomedical and metabolic imaging branch of the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, said in a journal news release.
The researchers used both single-frame MRI and time-resolved
multiframe acquisition MRI to measure the wall thickness of the
coronary arteries in 26 people with at least one risk factor for
coronary artery disease and 12 healthy people.
Time-resolved multiframe acquisition MRI captures five
continuous images to increase the success rate of obtaining an
image without any blurring. The success rate for providing a usable
image was 90 percent for this new technique, compared with 76
percent for the single-frame method, the study authors
reported.
The new technique was also better able to detect differences in
coronary artery wall thickness between people with coronary artery
disease risk factors and healthy people, the researchers found.
"Imaging the coronary arteries that supply the heart with blood is extremely difficult because they are very small and constantly in motion," Abd-Elmoniem said. "Obtaining a reliable and accurate image of these vessels is very important because thickening of the vessel wall is an early indicator of atherosclerosis [hardening of the arteries]."
Further research is needed to confirm the value of the new MRI
technique in identifying thickening of coronary artery walls, the
study authors pointed out.
More information
The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about
coronary artery disease.
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