Evaluation of cardiac iron load by cardiac magnetic resonance in thalassemia

2011 
To quantify myocardial iron stores by Cardiac Magnetic Resonance (CMR). Prospective cohort study. Thalassemia center in a teaching hospital. 60 transfusion dependant thalassemia major patients and 10 controls during 2008–2009. MRI T2* for cardiac iron load and cardiac functions was performed on a 1.5 Tesla Siemens Sonata machine using the thalassemia tools software. Ejection fraction (EF) was measured using standard CMR sequence and EF 20 ms as low risk. Simultaneous liver iron T2* values were categorized into normal i.e. >6.3 ms, mild iron overload 6.3–2.7 ms, moderate iron overload 2.7–1.4 ms and severe iron overload <1.4 ms. Pretransfusion serum ferritin levels were simultaneously determined. Data was analyzed by paired and unpaired t test of mean. Of 60 patients, 50% had no cardiac siderosis; 33.3% had mild to moderate and while 16.7% had severe cardiac siderosis. In contrast, only 8.3% had normal liver iron values, 55.7% had mild to moderate and 36% had severe iron stores. The mean serum ferritin of all 60 cases was 3528.6 ± 1958.6 ng/mL. There was a statistically significant difference in the mean cardiac T2* of patients (23.45 ± 13.4 ms) as compared to controls (32.67 ± 2.68 ms) (P<0.01). Thalassemia patients had significantly higher cardiac iron stores as compared to controls. Serum ferritin and liver iron values did not correlate with cardiac iron values. Three of 10 patients <10 years showed evidence of myocardial siderosis.
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