Multimodality imaging in takotsubo syndrome: a joint consensus document of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) and the Japanese Society of Echocardiography (JSE)
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) is a complex and still poorly recognized heart disease with a wide spectrum of possible clinical presentations. Despite its reversibility, it is associated with serious adverse in-hospital events and high complication rates during follow-up. Multimodality imaging is helpful for establishing the diagnosis, guiding therapy, and stratifying prognosis of TTS patients in both the acute and post-acute phase. Echocardiography plays a key role, particularly in the acute care setting, allowing for the assessment of left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic function and the identification of the typical apical-midventricular ballooning pattern, as well as the circumferential pattern of wall motion abnormalities. It is also useful in the early detection of complications (i.e. LV outflow tract obstruction, mitral regurgitation, right ventricular involvement, LV thrombi, and pericardial effusion) and monitoring of systolic function recovery. Left ventriculography allows the evaluation of LV function and morphology, identifying the typical TTS patterns when echocardiography is not available or wall motion abnormalities cannot be properly assessed with ultrasound. Cardiac magnetic resonance provides a more comprehensive depiction of cardiac morphology and function and tissue characterization and offers additional value to other imaging modalities for differential diagnosis (myocardial infarction and myocarditis). Coronary computed tomography angiography has a substantial role in the diagnostic workup of patients with acute chest pain and a doubtful TTS diagnosis to rule out other medical conditions. It can be considered as a non-invasive appropriate alternative to coronary angiography in several clinical scenarios. Although the role of nuclear imaging in TTS has not yet been well established, the combination of perfusion and metabolic imaging may provide useful information on myocardial function in both the acute and post-acute phase.
Contributors

Hiroyuki Okura
Author

Jelena R Ghadri
Author

Chisato Izumi
Author

Patrick Meimoun
Author

Masaki Izumo
Author

Dana Dawson
Author

Shuichiro Kaji
Author

Ingo Eitel
Author

Nobuyuki Kagiyama
Author

Yukari Kobayashi
Author

Christian Templin
Author

Victoria Delgado
Author

Satoshi Nakatani
Author

Bogdan A Popescu
Author

Philippe Bertrand
Author

Erwan Donal
Author

Marc Dweck
Author

Maurizio Galderisi
Author

Kristina H Haugaa
Author

Leyla Elif Sade
Author

Ivan Stankovic
Author

Bernard Cosyns
Author

Thor Edvardsen
Author

