Emerging molecular imaging targets and tools for myocardial fibrosis detection
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
Myocardial fibrosis is the heart’s common healing response to injury. While initially seeking to optimize the strength of diseased tissue, fibrosis can become maladaptive, producing stiff poorly functioning and pro-arrhythmic myocardium. Different patterns of fibrosis are associated with different myocardial disease states, but the presence and quantity of fibrosis largely confer adverse prognosis. Current imaging techniques can assess the extent and pattern of myocardial scarring, but lack specificity and detect the presence of established fibrosis when the window to modify this process may have ended. For the first time, novel molecular imaging methods, including gallium-68 (68Ga)-fibroblast activation protein inhibitor positron emission tomography (68Ga-FAPI PET), may permit highly specific imaging of
Contributors

Anna K Barton
Author
University of Edinburgh Edinburgh , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Evangelos Tzolos
Author
University of Edinburgh Edinburgh , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Rong Bing
Author

Trisha Singh
Author

Wolfgang Weber
Author

Markus Schwaiger
Author

Zohreh Varasteh
Author

Riemer H J A Slart
Author

David E Newby
Author

Marc R Dweck
Author
University of Edinburgh Edinburgh , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
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