Utilization of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in extremely obese adolescents scheduled for bariatric surgery
- PDF / 67,809 Bytes
- 1 Pages / 610 x 792 pts Page_size
- 76 Downloads / 154 Views
BioMed Central
Open Access
Poster presentation
Utilization of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in extremely obese adolescents scheduled for bariatric surgery Stephen Cook*1, Robert Murray2, Thomas H Inge3, Marc P Michalsky2, Subha V Raman1 and John A Bauer2 Address: 1The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA, 2Nationwide Children's Hospital, Columbus, OH, USA and 3Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA * Corresponding author
from 13th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions Phoenix, AZ, USA. 21-24 January 2010 Published: 21 January 2010 Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance 2010, 12(Suppl 1):P306
doi:10.1186/1532-429X-12-S1-P306
Abstracts of the 13th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions - 2010
Meeting abstracts - A single PDF containing all abstracts in this Supplement is available here. http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/files/pdf/1532-429X-11-S1-infoThis abstract is available from: http://jcmr-online.com/content/12/S1/P306 © 2010 Cook et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Introduction
Results
Bariatric surgery has been shown to provide significant and durable weight loss in extremely obese adults and its application and outcomes in the adolescent population is the main focus of several on-going prospective studies in the Unites States and elsewhere. Pre-surgical cardiovascular (CV) screening in the adolescent population is warranted as extreme obesity is an independent predictor of numerous forms of cardiac disease and mortality and is often complicated by practical and technological issues.
All study patients were accommodated by the CMR unit and our 40 min protocol was well accepted by all patients. In addition all CMR images were well-suited for analyses, whereas the majority of TTE studies (86%) were incomplete due to poor acoustic windows caused by chest wall fat. CMR derived parameters were: LV mass 0.73 ± 0.15 g/ cm; LV volume: 0.93 ± 0.15 mL/cm; LVEF 61 ± 4%, with no evidence of fibrosis. Epicardial fat was also measurable in each CMR exam (0.34 ± 0.15 cm).
Purpose
Conclusion
The objectives of our study was to evaluate the feasibility and patient acceptance of employing cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) as a modality for presurgical screening of adolescent bariatric surgery patients.
Our experience supports the use CMR as both safe and effective as a pre-operative screening tool for extremely obese adolescents regardless of the degree of chest-wall adiposity. This imaging modality may be superior to traditional 2D TTE methodology in defining cardiac structural and functional characteristics in this specific patient group. As morbid obesity prevalence continues to rise in adolescents, the value and demand for CMR modalities in this setting may also increase.
Methods Fourteen extremely obese adolescents (mean age 17 yrs, BMI 53 ± 10 kg/m2) scheduled for bariatric surgery, using a standard protocol for determination of LV structure (mass, volume, delayed enhancement as evidence of fibrosis, pericardial fat), and LV systolic and diastolic performance using a
Data Loading...