Publication: In vivo T2* weighted MRI visualizes cardiac lesions in murine models of acute and chronic viral myocarditis
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Date
2017
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Public Library of Science
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Citation
Helluy, X., M. Sauter, Y. Ye, G. Lykowsky, J. Kreutner, A. Yilmaz, R. Jahns, et al. 2017. “In vivo T2* weighted MRI visualizes cardiac lesions in murine models of acute and chronic viral myocarditis.” PLoS ONE 12 (3): e0172084. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0172084. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172084.
Research Data
Abstract
Objective: Acute and chronic forms of myocarditis are mainly induced by virus infections. As a consequence of myocardial damage and inflammation dilated cardiomyopathy and chronic heart failure may develop. The gold standard for the diagnosis of myocarditis is endomyocardial biopsies which are required to determine the etiopathogenesis of cardiac inflammatory processes. However, new non-invasive MRI techniques hold great potential in visualizing cardiac non-ischemic inflammatory lesions at high spatial resolution, which could improve the investigation of the pathophysiology of viral myocarditis. Results: Here we present the discovery of a novel endogenous T2* MRI contrast of myocardial lesions in murine models of acute and chronic CVB3 myocarditis. The evaluation of infected hearts ex vivo and in vivo by 3D T2w and T2*w MRI allowed direct localization of virus-induced myocardial lesions without any MRI tracer or contrast agent. T2*w weighted MRI is able to detect both small cardiac lesions of acute myocarditis and larger necrotic areas at later stages of chronic myocarditis, which was confirmed by spatial correlation of MRI hypointensity in myocardium with myocardial lesions histologically. Additional in vivo and ex vivo MRI analysis proved that the contrast mechanism was due to a strong paramagnetic tissue alteration in the vicinity of myocardial lesions, effectively pointing towards iron deposits as the primary contributor of contrast. The evaluation of the biological origin of the MR contrast by specific histological staining and transmission electron microscopy revealed that impaired iron metabolism primarily in mitochondria caused iron deposits within necrotic myocytes, which induces strong magnetic susceptibility in myocardial lesions and results in strong T2* contrast. Conclusion: This T2*w MRI technique provides a fast and sensitive diagnostic tool to determine the patterns and the severity of acute and chronic enteroviral myocarditis and the precise localization of tissue damage free of MR contrast agents.
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Keywords
Medicine and Health Sciences, Diagnostic Medicine, Diagnostic Radiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Imaging Techniques, Radiology and Imaging, Cardiology, Myocarditis, Biology and Life Sciences, Anatomy, Cardiovascular Anatomy, Heart, Histology, Cardiovascular Medicine, Cardiovascular Imaging, Experimental Organism Systems, Model Organisms, Mouse Models, Animal Models, Cell Biology, Cellular Types, Animal Cells, Muscle Cells, Biological Tissue, Muscle Tissue, Specimen Preparation and Treatment, Staining, Group-Specific Staining, Prussian Blue Staining, Negative Staining
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