Plain-English translation of NCT07382128 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
Researchers are using a special type of heart imaging called cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) to study how blood flows through the heart in people with different types of thickened heart muscle disease. This study wants to understand what makes each type unique, which could help doctors diagnose and care for patients better in the future. The imaging can show patterns of blood flow that may be different depending on what's causing the heart to thicken.
Currently, doctors struggle to tell the difference between several rare conditions that all cause the heart muscle to thicken in similar ways. By studying blood flow patterns with advanced imaging, researchers hope to find clear signatures that can help doctors diagnose the right condition faster and predict which patients are at highest risk for serious problems.
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If you join this study, you will undergo a cardiac magnetic resonance imaging scan as part of your regular medical care. This is a non-invasive imaging test where you lie inside an MRI machine for about 30–60 minutes while detailed pictures of your heart are taken. The scan itself is painless, though you may hear loud humming noises. Researchers will analyze these images to study your heart's blood flow patterns and compare them with other participants to find diagnostic patterns.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 7, 2026 · Not medical advice
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