Restoration of coronary blood flow after a heart attack can cause reperfusion injury potentially leading to impaired cardiac function, adverse tissue remodeling and heart failure. Iron is an essential biometal that may have a pathologic role in this process. There is a clinical need for a precise noninvasive method to detect iron for risk stratification of patients and therapy evaluation. Here, we report that magnetic susceptibility imaging in a large animal model shows an infarct paramagnetic shift associated with duration of coronary artery occlusion and the presence of iron. Iron validation techniques used include histology, immunohistochemistry, spectrometry and spectroscopy. Further mRNA analysis shows upregulation of ferritin and heme oxygenase. While conventional imaging corroborates the findings of iron deposition, magnetic susceptibility imaging has improved sensitivity to iron and mitigates confounding factors such as edema and fibrosis. Myocardial infarction patients receiving reperfusion therapy show magnetic susceptibility changes associated with hypokinetic myocardial wall motion and microvascular obstruction, demonstrating potential for clinical translation.
About The Expert
Brianna F Moon
Srikant Kamesh Iyer
Eileen Hwuang
Michael P Solomon
Anya T Hall
Rishabh Kumar
Nicholas J Josselyn
Elizabeth M Higbee-Dempsey
Andrew Tsourkas
Akito Imai
Keitaro Okamoto
Yoshiaki Saito
James J Pilla
Joseph H Gorman
Robert C Gorman
Cory Tschabrunn
Samuel J Keeney
Estibaliz Castillero
Giovanni Ferrari
Steffen Jockusch
Felix W Wehrli
Haochang Shou
Victor A Ferrari
Yuchi Han
Avanti Gulhane
Harold Litt
William Matthai
Walter R Witschey
References
PubMed