Evaluation of myocardial function and structure in valvular heart disease: what is needed for risk assessment and therapeutic decisions?

European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

12 January 2026
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ESC Journals IMAGING Cardiac Computed Tomography (CT) Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR) Echocardiography VALVULAR, MYOCARDIAL, PERICARDIAL, PULMONARY, CONGENITAL HEART DISEASE Valvular Heart Disease

Abstract

Abstract

Valvular heart disease (VHD) is traditionally assessed through gradients, regurgitant volumes, and ejection fraction—but these valve-centric indices miss the earliest and most decisive signal: myocardial injury. Contemporary evidence shows that VHD is a myocardial disease, where outcomes are driven far more by the ventricle’s biological response than by the valve lesion itself. This state-of-the-art review redefines VHD through a myocardium-first lens, highlighting tools that expose dysfunction long before conventional thresholds fail. A focused triad—LV global longitudinal strain (LV-GLS), RV strain with RV–PA coupling, and LA reservoir strain—detects injury at its inception and sharply improves prognostic precision. Cardiac magnetic resonance adds mechanistic depth through native T1, extracellular volume, and late gadolinium enhancement, identifying diffuse and focal fibrosis that dictate timing and reversibility of remodelling. Next-generation technologies extend this paradigm: CT-derived ECV as a scalable fibrosis surrogate, molecular imaging revealing active calcification and fibro-inflammation, and AI-driven models that fuse imaging, biomarkers, and clinical variables into personalized risk trajectories. We propose a serial, multiparametric, AI-enhanced strategy centred on myocardial protection—using LV-GLS tracking, RV–PA coupling, atrial mechanics, and fibrosis imaging to intervene during the true therapeutic window. This review positions a simple but transformative concept: managing VHD means managing the myocardium. Adopting this shift is essential for preserving cardiac health—not merely correcting valve anatomy.

Contributors

Erwan Donal
Erwan Donal

Author

Hospital Pontchaillou of Rennes Rennes , France

Marc Dweck
Marc Dweck

Author

University of Edinburgh Edinburgh , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Thomas A Treibel
Thomas A Treibel

Author

Barts Health NHS Trust London , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

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