Estrogen-related receptors could be a key to repairing energy metabolism and muscle fatigue

A new Salk Institute study suggests estrogen-related receptors could be a key to repairing energy metabolism and muscle...

Study shows cardiovascular benefits of GLP-1RAs in patients following bariatric surgery

Medications like semaglutide and liraglutide may help to reduce the risk for heart attacks, strokes, and other major...

Hidden heart and lung damage detected in patients with long COVID

Patients suffering from long COVID may exhibit persistent inflammation in the heart and lungs for up to a...

Hearing aids may help older adults combat social isolation

Providing hearing aids and advice on their use may preserve social connections that often wane as we age,...

Want to eat slower? Pick meals that need chopsticks, not hands

Two meals, three sequences, one finding: meal type, not the order of eating, shapes how long we chew...

Detailed personality tests may help personalize care for people with bipolar disorder

People with cancer, heart disease and other conditions have come to expect treatments that their medical teams "personalize"...

New guideline aims to help primary care clinicians diagnose and treat hypertension

A new guideline to diagnose and treat hypertension is aimed at helping primary care clinicians, including family physicians,...

Infertility in women linked to higher risk of heart disease

Women who experience infertility are more likely to develop heart and blood vessel conditions later in life, with...

Innovative technology offers non-invasive way to observe blood clotting

Researchers from the University of Tokyo have found a way to observe clotting activity in blood as it...

Snus withdrawal linked to weight gain and elevated blood pressure

Snus users who stopped using snus experienced higher blood pressure and gained weight. This has been shown by...

Tufts researchers develop dental floss sensor for real time stress monitoring

Chronic stress can lead to increased blood pressure and cardiovascular disease, decreased immune function, depression, and anxiety. Unfortunately,...

Flawed federal programs maroon rural Americans in telehealth blackouts

Flawed Federal Programs Maroon Rural Americans in Telehealth BlackoutsPlay Ada Carol Adkins lives with her two dogs in...

Maternal health during pregnancy linked to higher blood pressure in children

Children born to mothers with obesity, gestational diabetes mellitus or a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy have higher systolic...

National initiative boosts heart failure treatment across US hospitals

About 6.7 million adults in the U.S. are living with heart failure, and that number is expected to...

HIV testing and outreach falter as Trump funding cuts sweep the South

Storm clouds hung low above a community center in Jackson, where pastor Andre Devine invited people inside for...

This news might ruin your appetite — and summer

It's a marvel of food technology: ice cream that resists melting. In a video explaining the science behind...

Acetate and gut bacteria work together to reduce obesity in mice

Researchers led by Hiroshi Ohno at the RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences (IMS) in Japan have discovered...

New evidence shows long COVID’s toll on health across all U.S. states

Lingering post-COVID symptoms are more than a nuisance, they’re independently linked to poorer physical, mental, and daily functioning...

Early cardiovascular benefits of semaglutide seen within months in SELECT trial

Semaglutide can rapidly reduce heart attacks and other serious cardiovascular complications in adults with overweight or obesity who...

Residual inflammation can linger in psoriasis patients despite skin treatment

New research shows that in patients with psoriasis, even though their skin responds well to treatment with biologics,...

Cardiac MRI could help detect lamin heart disease

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the heart could help to detect a life-threatening heart disease and enable clinicians to better predict which patients are most at risk, according to a new study led by UCL (University College London) researchers.

Lamin heart disease is a genetic condition that affects the heart's ability to pump blood and can cause life-threatening abnormal heart rhythms. It is caused by a mutation in the LMNA gene, which is responsible for producing proteins used in heart cells. It often affects people in their 30s and 40s.

Lamin disease is rare but also often undiagnosed. About one in 5,000 people in the general population carry a potentially harmful LMNA mutation and up to one in 10 with a family history of heart failure will have lamin heart disease.

The new study, published in the journal JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, found that MRI detected heart inflammation, scarring, and impaired function among carriers of a mutated LMNA gene whose hearts would have been classed as healthy according to more standard tests.

The team argued that this information from MRI – the gold standard of heart imaging – should be included in how disease risk is estimated and inform decisions about which patients should receive a heart transplant or an implantable defibrillator (a device that monitors the heartbeat and can deliver an electrical shock if a dangerous rhythm is detected).

Currently, risk estimates are based on data from electrocardiograms (ECGs), which only track the heart's electrical activity, as well as patient sex, genetics, symptoms and a basic measure of heart function by ultrasound (echocardiogram).

Senior author Dr. Gaby Captur (UCL Institute of Cardiovascular Science and the Royal Free Hospital, London) said: "Genetics alone cannot predict how this disease will progress. Two people with the same variant can have completely different outcomes.

"The current tool to predict risk is not brilliant and underperforms for women in particular. Predicting risk is important because it determines which patients are recommended to have a defibrillator. These devices are for life and the decision to have one is major and life-changing. Currently, seven out of 10 people who receive one don't end up benefiting from it.

"Our study needs to be repeated in a larger group of patients, but our findings show the potential of cardiac MRI to improve disease risk predictions and to become a standard part of how we manage lamin heart disease."

Cardiac MRI picks up scarring of the heart tissue, inflammation and signs the heart muscle is not working as well as it should among carriers of an LMNA mutation who do not have more overt signs of disease and whose heart is pumping blood normally. These are signals that other tests such as an ECG or an echocardiogram would have missed.

Gene therapies that could tackle the cause of lamin heart disease are currently being trialled. Our findings suggest a potential role for MRI in tracking disease progression and response to treatment. MRI can also identify people with the earliest-stage disease, who display subtle abnormalities suggesting that their disease is progressing, and hence may benefit the most from new therapies."

Dr. Cristian Topriceanu, Lead Author, UCL Institute of Cardiovascular Science

The LMNA gene instructs the body to make proteins lamin A and C, which are critical to the structure and stability of the nuclei (command centres) of heart cells. Mutations to the LMNA gene can lead to problems including dilated cardiomyopathy (where the heart muscle wall becomes enlarged and weaker), life-threatening heart rhythms and disruption to the electrical signals regulating the heartbeat. Lamin disease affects people at younger ages and has higher rates of sudden cardiac death than other, similar forms of heart muscle disease.

Currently, close family members of individuals with lamin disease are screened for an LMNA mutation. Carriers of a mutated gene are usually followed up with electrocardiograms and echocardiograms to detect conduction disease (a disorder of the heart's electrical system), arrythmias, and early heart dysfunction. The frequency of follow-up depends on symptoms and abnormalities detected (if any).

For the new study, researchers analyzed MRI data from 187 people. Sixty-seven of these had lamin heart disease, 73 had dilated cardiomyopathy without a known genetic cause, and 47 were healthy volunteers.

The research team found that heart damage, inflammation, and scarrings were central features of lamin heart disease, but not of non-genetic dilated cardiomyopathy.

The team also found that participants with a specific LMNA mutation – a shortened, or truncated gene – had worse heart functioning. A truncated LMNA gene has previously been linked to more aggressive disease than other LMNA mutations, but the cardiac MRIs showed why this might be in terms of the mechanics of the heart.

Patients in this study were recruited from the Barts Heart Centre, University Hospitals Birmingham, Royal Free London, Royal Papworth Hospital and Fondazione Toscana Gabriele Monasterio (Pisa, Italy).

The study received funding from the British Heart Foundation, the National Institute of Health and Care Research (NIHR), Barts Charity, the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, and the NIHR UCLH Biomedical Research Centre.

Source:

University College London

Journal reference:

Topriceanu, C.-C., et al. (2025). The Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Phenotype of Lamin Heart Disease. JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging. doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmg.2025.01.004.


Source: http://www.news-medical.net/news/20250514/Cardiac-MRI-could-help-detect-lamin-heart-disease.aspx

Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
guest