Interactive Transcript
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This next case is an 83 year old female with dyspnea on exertion
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who ended up getting an echocardiogram that showed normal left ventricular
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function but really large atrial. And she eventually got sent to a cardiac
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MRI to look for an infiltrated cardiomyopathy as an explanation for her
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heart failure symptoms. So what we see on this initial set of static
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images on the cardiac MRI is that this patient has really,
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really dilated atrial, out of proportion to the left ventricular and right
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ventricular dilation. This is a pattern highly suggestive of restrictive
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cardiomyopathy. And certainly we know from her history, that fits her clinical
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diagnosis as well. So when we look at cine images of this same
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patient, we see that there's preserved left and right ventricular systolic
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function. The left ventricle here, there's a little bit of blurring at end
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systole. But I would say it's normal to low normal systolic function.
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And then you see it, there's both mitral and tricuspid regurgitation based
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on these regurgitant jets through the valves. And then you see that these
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atrial are massively dilated. And that there's also
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blood swirling in the atrial. And whenever you see this blood swirling on
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cardiac MRI, that really tells you that it's just not moving very fast.
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So there's a lot of stasis. If the blood starts swirling,
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that means that there's basically saturation of the blood that's happening
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because it's moving so slowly through the image.
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And so anytime you see that, you know that this patient has poor
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function in whatever chamber it's that you're looking at. This patient also
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had atrial fibrillation that accounts for some of the fuzziness. And one
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way you can often tell if there's atrial fibrillation on cardiac MRI is
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you don't see that nice atrial kick. You should see a little squeeze
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of the left atrium right before systole. And in this case,
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you really just don't see that. It's sort of just static,
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the left atrial wall throughout the cardiac cycle.
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Now when we go to the short axis cine images, I'll just show
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a representative slice, you're gonna find that the left ventricular function
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here actually looks pretty good. And right ventricular function as well.
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I think if you had only this image, you might not really say
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there's a whole lot wrong with this patient. And this is again really
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typical of restrictive cardiomyopathy. You have preserved left ventricular
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function with really abnormal atrial morphologically. Now when we move on
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to the late gadolinium enhancement images, what we're really looking for
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here is some sort of enhancement that might explain why this patient has
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a restrictive cardiomyopathy. And remember, restrictive cardiomyopathies
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are caused by increased stiffness of the ventricles. And that stiffness
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leads to the atrial having to work harder to push blood into the
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ventricles. So although the ventricles have normal systolic function, they
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squeeze fine. They don't relax normally. So the diastolic function is abnormal.
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And so we're looking for diseases that could be causing that diastolic dysfunction.
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And unfortunately in this case, we really didn't find anything. You see
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that there's really no late enhancement in the ventricles on this view,
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the four chamber view. And then if we go to a two chamber
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view, similar, nice dark uniform nulling of the myocardium. And then finally
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when we go to the stack of short axis views, you can see
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that again, there's really nice uniform nulling of the myocardium, no late
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gadolinium enhancement identified that would explain the restrictive cardiomyopathy.
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Now in some later cases, we're gonna go through other etiologies that can
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explain restrictive cardiomyopathy and show their enhancement pattern. But
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in this case, if you were reading this, you would have to say
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this is a patient who has restrictive cardiomyopathy features,
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but with no late gadolinium enhancement to suggest any scarring or infiltrated
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disease to explain her restrictive cardiomyopathy.
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