Native T1 time of right ventricular insertion points by cardiac magnetic resonance: relation with invasive haemodynamics and outcome in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
Increased afterload to the right ventricle (RV) has been shown to induce myocardial fibrosis at the RV insertion points (RVIPs). Such changes can be discrete but potentially detected by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) T1-mapping. Whether RVIP fibrosis is associated with prognosis in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is unknown.
We prospectively investigated 167 consecutive HFpEF patients, a population frequently suffering from post-capillary pulmonary hypertension, who underwent CMR including T1-mapping. About 92.8% also underwent right heart catheterization for haemodynamic assessment.
Native T1 times were 995 ± 73 ms at the anterior and 1040 ± 90 ms at the inferior RVIP. By Spearman’s rank order testing, RVIP T1 times were significantly correlated with pulmonary artery pressure (mean PAP,
Interstitial expansion of the anterior RVIP as detected by CMR T1-mapping reflects haemodynamic alterations, and is independently related with prognosis in HFpEF.
Contributors

Christian Nitsche
Author

Stefan Aschauer
Author

Matthias Koschutnik
Author

Amir Snidat
Author

Andreas A Kammerlander
Author

Dietrich Beitzke
Author

Christina Binder
Author

Christian Loewe
Author

Franz Duca
Author

Diana Bonderman
Author

Christian Hengstenberg
Author


