Abstract
Myocardial infarction (MI) continues to be a leading cause of death worldwide. The precise quantification of infarcted tissue is crucial to diagnosis, therapeutic management, and post-MI care. Late gadolinium enhancement-cardiac magnetic resonance (LGE-CMR) is regarded as the gold standard for precise infarct tissue localization in MI patients. A fundamental limitation of LGE-CMR is the invasive intravenous introduction of gadolinium-based contrast agents that present potential high-risk toxicity, particularly for individuals with underlying chronic kidney diseases. Herein, a completely non-invasive methodology is developed to identify the location and extent of an infarct region in the left ventricle via a machine learning (ML) model using only cardiac strains as inputs. In this approach, the remarkable performance of a multi-fidelity ML model is demonstrated, which combines rodent-based in-silico-generated training data (low-fidelity) with very limited patient-specific human data (high-fidelity) in predicting LGE ground truth. The results offer a new paradigm for developing feasible prognostic tools by augmenting synthetic simulation-based data with very small amounts of in vivo human data. More broadly, the proposed approach can significantly assist with addressing biomedical challenges in healthcare where human data are limited.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | e06933 |
| Pages (from-to) | e06933 |
| Journal | Advanced Science |
| Volume | 12 |
| Issue number | 30 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 14 2025 |
Keywords
- LGE-CMR
- UNet architectures
- cardiac strains
- multi-fidelity
- myocardial infarction
- Humans
- Rats
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
- Machine Learning
- Myocardial Infarction/diagnosis
- Animals
- Contrast Media
- Computer Simulation
- Chronic Disease
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Medicine (miscellaneous)
- General Chemical Engineering
- Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)
- General Materials Science
- General Engineering
- General Physics and Astronomy