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KMID : 1149520170010020110
Cardiovasclar Imaging Asia
2017 Volume.1 No. 2 p.110 ~ p.115
Gender Differences in Native Myocardial T1 in a Healthy Chinese Volunteer Cohort
Bulluck Heerajnarain

Bryant Jennifer A
Tan Jonan Zhien
Go Yun Yun
Le Thu-Thao
Tan Ru San
Lim Tiong Keng
Tang Hak Chiaw
Lath Narayan
Low Adrian Shoen
Chin Calvin Woon-Loong
Cook Stuart A
Hausenloy Derek J
Abstract
Objective: T1 mapping cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is emerging as a promising imaging biomarker. However, there are conflicting reports on whether myocardial T1 is affected by age, gender, heart rate, and blood T1. Therefore, the aim of this study was to assess the influence of these parameters on myocardial T1 at 1.5T in a healthy Chinese cohort.

Materials and Methods: 101 healthy Chinese volunteers underwent CMR (Siemens Aera 1.5T scanner). A mid-ventricular short axis modified Look-Locker inversion recovery T1 map was acquired. The images were analyzed on CVI42. Manual regions of interest were drawn in the inferior septum and in the blood pool.

Results: Participants' mean age was 46¡¾13 (range 21 to 68) years and 51 out of 101 patients (51%) were males. Females in this study had significantly higher myocardial T1 and blood T1 values than males (1025¡¾26 ms vs. 1001¡¾23 ms, p<0.001; and 1659¡¾60 ms vs. 1577¡¾54 ms, p<0.001 respectively). There was no correlation between myocardial T1 and age. Blood T1 and heart rate correlated with myocardial T1 in females, but not in males and both were significantly associated with myocardial T1 in a multivariate analysis. After adjusting myocardial T1 for heart rate and blood T1 in females, the standard deviation reduced by 12% but the gender difference was still present.

Conclusion: Gender-specific T1 values should be established by each center, and heart rate and blood T1 should be taken into account in female participants. This would be important in order to reliably detect small changes in native T1 in pathologies with diffuse interstitial fibrosis.
KEYWORD
Magnetic resonance imaging, Myocardium, Reference values, Sex, Healthy volunteers
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