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Comparative Study
. 1983 Nov;4(11):786-94.
doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.eurheartj.a061399.

Myocardial map derived from two-dimensional echocardiography: reproducible and standardized description of infarction topographies

Comparative Study

Myocardial map derived from two-dimensional echocardiography: reproducible and standardized description of infarction topographies

T Touche et al. Eur Heart J. 1983 Nov.

Abstract

The aim of this study was to improve the reproducibility and the standardization of the topographical assessment of myocardial infarctions in routine two-dimensional echocardiography. A myocardial map of the left ventricle was derived from a necropsy study of normal human hearts; interventricular grooves and papillary muscles were used as anatomical landmarks defining 16 segments with similar planimetered surfaces. A reporting sheet was prepared, with diagrams of standardized echo sections and with a map showing the position of the corresponding outlines. The echocardiographic method consisted in identifying on each section the regions without systolic thickening, and displaying the results on the map, until a coherent picture of the abnormal areas was obtained. Interobserver reproducibility was studied in 50 consecutive patients with prior myocardial infarction; segments were classified as fully abnormal, partly abnormal, non-visualized, and normal. Among the 800 segments there were 1% severe and 12% moderate discrepancies; discrepancies were significantly lower for segments with confrontation in two different sections intersecting on the map. A classification of infarction topographies was obtained in 100 consecutive patients; it was compared with the data of two reanalysable pathologic series from the literature; a similar presentation of the results showed similar typical patterns of myocardial involvement, for which a nomenclature was proposed. A myocardial map may be used to provide a simple and reproducible description of infarction topographies; the results obtained lead us to recommend an echocardiographic standardization of ventricular segmentation and of nomenclature of infarction topographies, similar to that of pathological studies.

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