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Multimodality imaging for the evaluation and management of patients with long-term (durable) left ventricular assist devices

Matteo Cameli, Hatem Soliman-Aboumarie, Maria Concetta Pastore, Kadir Çalişkan, Maja Čikeš, Madalina Garbi, Hoong Sern Lim, Denisa Muraru, Giulia Elena Mandoli, Valeria Pergola, Sven Plein, Gianluca Pontone, Osama Soliman, Pal Maurovich-Horvat, Erwan Donal, Bernard Cosyns, Steffen E. Petersen, Alexios Antonopoulos, Yohann Bohbot, Marc R. Dweck, Pankaj Garg, Alessia Gimelli, Ivan Stanković, Valtteri Uusitalo

2024European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) are gaining increasing importance as therapeutic strategy in advanced heart failure (HF), not only as bridge to recovery or to transplant but also as destination therapy. Even though long-term LVADs are considered a precious resource to expand the treatment options and improve clinical outcome of these patients, these are limited by peri-operative and post-operative complications, such as device-related infections, haemocompatibility-related events, device mis-positioning, and right ventricular failure. For this reason, a precise pre-operative, peri-operative, and post-operative evaluation of these patients is crucial for the selection of LVAD candidates and the management LVAD recipients. The use of different imaging modalities offers important information to complete the study of patients with LVADs in each phase of their assessment, with peculiar advantages/disadvantages, ideal application, and reference parameters for each modality. This clinical consensus statement sought to guide the use of multimodality imaging for the evaluation of patients with advanced HF undergoing LVAD implantation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDestination therapyMultimodalityModality (human–computer interaction)ModalitiesHeart failureIntensive care medicineBridge (graph theory)Bridge to transplantationVentricular assist deviceSurgeryCardiologyComputer scienceWorld Wide WebSocial scienceHuman–computer interactionSociologyMechanical Circulatory Support DevicesCardiac Structural Anomalies and RepairCardiac Arrest and Resuscitation