Feb. 4, 2003 - Advanced magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) technology can detect heart attack in
emergency room patients with chest pain more accurately and faster
than traditional methods, according to a new study supported by the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).
Of the more than 5 million
patients who visit emergency departments with chest pain each year,
only about 40 percent can be immediately diagnosed with heart attack
using standard tests. The majority of patients must undergo a number
of tests and further hospitalization for a conclusive diagnosis to be
reached.
"This study lays the groundwork
for what could mean a dramatic change in how heart attacks are
diagnosed -- and how rapidly patients receive treatment once they
arrive at the hospital," said NHLBI Director Dr. Claude Lenfant.
"Using MRI to detect heart problems in the emergency department will
ultimately save lives. Because patients will be diagnosed and treated
more quickly, cardiac MRIs might save costs, as well."
Published in the February 4 issue
of "Circulation:
Journal of the American Heart Association", the findings suggest
that more patients who are suffering a heart attack or who otherwise
have severe blockages in their coronary arteries could receive
treatment to reduce or prevent permanent damage to the heart if they
are assessed with MRI.
Researchers evaluated the ability
of high-resolution MRI to detect acute coronary syndrome (heart attack
or unstable angina) in emergency department patients with chest pain.
MRI results were compared with three standard diagnostic tests: an
electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG), blood enzyme test, and the TIMI risk
score, which assesses the risk of complications or death in patients
with chest pain based on a combination of several clinical
characteristics. MRI detected all of the patients' heart attacks,
including three in patients who had normal EKGs. In addition, MRI
detected more patients with unstable angina than the other tests.
The study is part of a
collaborative program among the NHLBI, the Warren Grant Magnuson
Clinical Center -- both components of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH), the Federal Government's primary agency for biomedical
and behavioral research -- and Suburban Hospital in Bethesda,
Maryland. Another area of the program, supported by NIH's National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, is studying the use of
MRI to diagnose and treat stroke. NIH is part of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services.
In the chest pain study, 161
patients whose initial EKG did not indicate a heart attack were
evaluated with traditional diagnostic tests and a cardiac MRI after
their condition was stabilized. The MRI lasted around 38 minutes. All
patients were followed up 6 to 8 weeks after the initial visit to the
emergency department.
Researchers studied the ability of
each test to detect acute coronary syndrome (sensitivity) as well as
how often an abnormal test result correctly identified a patient with
acute coronary syndrome (specificity). MRI accurately diagnosed 21 of
the 25 patients (84 percent) determined to have acute coronary
syndrome -- a significantly higher level of sensitivity than EKG
criteria for ischemia (restricted blood flow), blood enzyme levels,
and TIMI risk score. MRI was also more specific than abnormal EKG.
"MRI was the strongest predictor
of acute coronary syndrome -- for both heart attacks and unstable
angina," said Dr. Andrew Arai, principal investigator of the study,
who leads the cardiovascular imaging section of the NHLBI Laboratory
of Cardiac Energetics. "MRI allows us to look at how well the heart is
pumping, how good the supply of blood to the heart is in specific
areas, and whether there is evidence of permanent damage to the
heart."
MRI is a type of body scan that
uses magnets and computers to provide high-quality images based on
varying characteristics of the body's tissues. The technology allows
physicians to study the heart's overall structure and functioning
continuously in three dimensions.
MRI addresses another critical
issue in assessing patients with acute coronary syndrome: time.
Patients can be scanned in under 40 minutes; if severe blockages are
found, they could receive vital treatment to restore blood flow, such
as clot-busting drugs, angioplasty, or coronary artery bypass surgery.
Current recommendations are for such therapies to begin within one
hour from the start of a heart attack for optimal effectiveness.
EKG records the electrical
activity of the heart to detect abnormal heart rhythms, some areas of
damage, inadequate blood flow, and heart enlargement. Like MRI, EKG is
noninvasive. Because of its low degree of sensitivity, however, EKG
immediately diagnoses only about 10 percent of patients with acute
coronary syndrome. It is not uncommon for an EKG to appear normal
during a heart attack or an episode of unstable angina.
Patients suspected of having a
heart attack that is not confirmed by an EKG typically have their
blood tested for enzymes or other substances ("markers") that indicate
permanent damage to the heart tissue. Because the markers are not
evident in the blood until several hours after a heart attack,
patients whose EKG appears normal may need to stay in the hospital for
12 to 24 hours to ensure the blood test is accurate. Furthermore,
because the blood test detects only permanently damaged tissue, it
does not detect unstable angina.
Unstable angina can be considered
an "impending heart attack." Heart attacks are caused by a blood clot
from a tear or break in fatty deposits (plaque) that have built up
inside a coronary artery; when the blood clot suddenly cuts off most
or all blood supply to the heart, heart tissue is permanently damaged.
In unstable angina, the coronary artery has many or all of the same
characteristics as a heart attack, except that the problems are not
quite severe enough to cause permanent heart damage. Because no heart
cells die in unstable angina, the condition is harder to detect with
standard tests.
Approximately two percent of
patients with a heart attack are discharged home from the emergency
department without the heart attack being detected and treated. In
addition, many patients with unstable angina are sent home without
diagnosis; they may progress to a heart attack after discharge or
require urgent medical therapy soon thereafter. Patients with
undetected acute coronary syndrome are twice as likely to die as those
whose condition is detected and treated. In the study, three of the
patients were not characterized as having acute coronary syndrome
until their follow-up visit.
"MRI provides us with additional
and more precise information than is currently accessible from other
imaging methods, such as echocardiography, coronary angiography, and
positron emission tomography," added Dr. Robert S. Balaban, scientific
director of the NHLBI Laboratory Research Program, and a co-author of
the paper. "MRI technology could help us get another 20 percent of
patients with acute coronary syndrome to life-saving treatment more
quickly, and reduce the number of patients spending hours in the
hospital for long-term EKG and enzyme monitoring."
Balaban estimates that MRI to
detect acute coronary syndrome in the emergency department could be
used in hospitals nationwide within a few years. Many U.S. hospitals
currently have equipment that could be upgraded for this use.
"This study represents a shift of
moving technology directly from the basic science laboratory to the
clinical setting," added Balaban. "Working with physicists and
engineers, we hope to further develop MRI to provide even more precise
imaging and quantifiable ways to measure coronary blockages.
"MRI is a noninvasive imaging tool
that we can now interact with in 'real time' allowing us to see soft
tissues, such as the wall of a diseased artery or the heart muscle
itself while measuring physiological functions such as contraction,
blood flow, and viability," Balaban noted. "The future of MRI is to go
from diagnostic uses, as described in this study, to therapeutic
applications. MRI can be used to guide minimally invasive procedures,
including cardiac catheterization to open blocked arteries, direct the
injection of therapeutic agents such as gene vectors or stem cells
into damaged areas of the heart, replace heart valves, or remove cells
that are causing arrhythmias."
NHLBI press releases and other
materials, including information about heart disease and heart attack
(http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/actintime/index.htm)
are available online at <http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov>.
To keep up with the latest news
for seniors by the U.S. Government, go to First Gov for Seniors (www.seniors.gov).