Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging as a Risk Stratification Tool in COVID-19 Myocarditis
Olga Nedeljkovic-Arsenovic, Arsen Ristić, Nemanja Đorđević, Milenko Tomić, Gordana Krljanac, Ruzica Maksimović

TL;DR
This study shows that cardiac MRI can detect heart damage in some people with lingering symptoms after a mild case of COVID-19.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that CMR can identify myocarditis in previously healthy individuals with post-COVID symptoms and links specific MRI findings to clinical outcomes.
Findings
Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) was found in 39% of patients, indicating myocarditis.
Septal LGE was associated with a higher risk of arrhythmias.
Chest pain, fatigue, and elevated troponin independently predicted LGE on CMR.
Abstract
The aim of this retrospective study was to identify myocardial injury after COVID-19 inflammation and explore whether myocardial damage could be a possible cause of the persistent symptoms following COVID-19 infection in previously healthy individuals. This study included 139 patients who were enrolled between January and June 2021, with a mean age of 46.7 ± 15.2 years, of whom 68 were men and 71 were women without known cardiac or pulmonary diseases. All patients underwent clinical work-up, laboratory analysis, cardiac ultrasound, and CMR on a 1.5 T scanner using a recommended protocol for morphological and functional assessment before and after contrast media application with multi-parametric sequences. In 39% of patients, late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) was found as a sign of myocarditis. Fibrinogen was statistically significantly higher in patients with LGE than in those without…
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Taxonomy
TopicsViral Infections and Immunology Research · COVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Cardiovascular Effects of Exercise
