Myocardial ischaemia following COVID-19: a cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
J. Ranjit Arnold, Jian L. Yeo, Charley A. Budgeon, Simran Shergill, Rachel England, Hunain Shiwani, Jessica Artico, James C. Moon, Miroslawa Gorecka, Giles Roditi, Andrew Morrow, Kenneth Mangion, Mayooran Shanmuganathan, Christopher A. Miller, Amedeo Chiribiri, Mohammed Alzahir

TL;DR
This study found that about 20% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 and elevated heart markers had heart issues, but these were similar to those in a control group with similar health conditions.
Contribution
The study is the first to use cardiovascular magnetic resonance to compare myocardial ischaemia in post-COVID-19 patients with matched controls.
Findings
Myocardial ischaemia was present in ~20% of post-COVID-19 patients with elevated troponin.
There was no significant difference in ischaemia frequency between post-COVID-19 patients and matched controls.
Ischaemia was not strongly associated with myocardial scar or prior heart disease in these patients.
Abstract
The pathophysiology of myocardial injury following COVID-19 remains uncertain. COVID-HEART was a prospective, multicentre study utilising cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to characterise COVID-related myocardial injury. In this pre-specified analysis, the objectives were to examine (1) the frequency of myocardial ischaemia following COVID-19, and (2) the association between ischaemia and myocardial injury. We studied 59 patients hospitalised with COVID-19 and elevated serum troponin (COVID + /troponin + , age 61 ± 11 years) and 37 control subjects without COVID-19 or elevated troponin and similar by age and cardiovascular comorbidities (COVID −/comorbidity + , 64 ± 10 years). Subjects underwent multi-parametric CMR (comprising assessment of ventricular volumes, stress perfusion, T1/T2 mapping and scar). The primary endpoint was the frequency of inducible myocardial ischaemia.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 Clinical Research Studies · Long-Term Effects of COVID-19 · Cardiovascular Effects of Exercise
