16:00 |
661. |
Diagnostic Performance of Non-Contrast Whole-Heart Coronary
Magnetic Resonance Angiography Combined with Black-Blood
Arterial Wall Imaging in Patients with Suspected Coronary
Artery Disease
Qinyi Dai1,
Zhaoqi Zhang1, Yi He1, Wei Yu1,
Biao Lu1, Zhanming Fan1, Jing An2,
Lixin Jin3, Renate Jerecic3, Guobin Li4,
Wolfgang Rehwald5, Debiao Li6
1Radiology, AnZhen
hospital, Beijing, China; 2Siemens
Mindit Magnetic Resonance, Siemens Healthcare, MR
Collaboration NE Asia; 3Siemens Limited China,
Siemens Healthcare, MR Collaboration NE Asia; 4Siemens
Mindit Magnetic Resonance Ltd.; 5Siemens
Healthcare USA; 6Northwestern University,
Chicago, USA
The combined Whole-heart
coronary MRA and black-blood-coronary-wall-imaging hasn't
been reported to detect CAD yet. Continuous slices for wall
imaging of 48 segments were positioned along the suspected
lesions of WH CMRA. A positive diagnosis of CAD was made
when stenosis ¡Ý50% at least one of the techniques.
15/48 segments were diagnosed as CAD by x-ray angiography.
The sensitivities of WH CMRA only and both techniques were
(12/15) and (14/15), NPVs were (33/36) and (33/34),
respectively. There was no difference in specificity or PPV.
The combination of two techniques improves the diagnostic
accuracy to detect CAD over WH CMRA alone. |
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16:12 |
662. |
Contrast-Enhanced Whole-Heart Coronary MRA in 5 Minutes
Using Radial EPI
Himanshu Bhat1, Qi Yang2, Sven
Zuehlsdorff3, Debiao Li1
1Radiology and Biomedical
Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United
States; 2Radiology, Capital Medical University,
Xuanwu Hospital, Beijing, China;
3Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc., Chicago, IL,
United States
Whole-heart coronary MRA is
challenging due to the long data acquisition time on the
order of 8-12 minutes. The purpose of this work was to
optimize a radial EPI technique for contrast-enhanced
whole-heart coronary MRA, with the goal of combining the
scan efficiency of EPI with the motion insensitivity of
radial sampling. |
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16:24 |
663. |
MRI
Assessment of Endothelial Damage and Angiogenesis in Porcine
Coronary Arteries Using Gadofosveset
Steen
Fjord Pedersen1, William P. Paaske2,
Troels Thiem3, Steffen Ringgaard4,
Samuel A Thrysøe4, Won Yong Kim5
1Aarhus University Hospital,
Aarhus, Denmark; 2Dept. of Cardiothoracic and
Vascular Surgery T, Aarhus University Hospital, Skejby,
Denmark; 3Dept. of Cardiology, Aarhus University
Hospital, Skejby, Denmark; 4MR-center, Aarhus
University Hospital, Skejby, Denmark; 5Dept. of
Cardiology, and MR-center, Aarhus University Hospital,
Skejby, Denmark
Endothelial damage and
angiogenesis are essential in atherosclerotic plaque
development and destabilization .We sought to examine
whether contrast enhanced MRI using gadofosveset would
enable the detection of endothelial damage and neovessels in
balloon injured porcine coronary arteries. MRI showed
contrast enhancement of the injured vs. the non-injured
control artery with a significant increase in the diameter
of (30±19 % versus 4±8%; P=0.01). Ex-vivo coronary vessel
wall MRI contrast enhancement was in agreement with
extravasated Evans blue with a kappa value of 0.64
(p<0.001). and there was a linear correlation between
coronary MRI contrast-enhancement and microvessel density
(r=0.78, p<0.001). |
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16:36 |
664. |
Assessment of Coronary Endothelial Dysfunction in Young
Healthy Smokers Using 3T Phase Contrast Cine MRI and Cold
Pressor Test
Shingo Kato1, Hajime Sakuma1, Kakuya
Kitagawa1, Motonori Nagata1, Yeonyee
E. Yoon1, Shinichi Takase1
1Department of Radiology, Mie
University Hospital, Tsu, Mie, Japan
Blood flow volumes in the LAD
artery and in coronary sinus (CS) at rest and during cold
pressor test were quantified in 10 young non-smokers and 6
age-matched smokers using 3T MR imager. Coronary flow was
significantly augmented during CPT in non-smokers (LAD: 28.5
± 6.8mL/min to 36.5 ± 7.3mL/min, p=0.017). However, the CPT/rest
coronary flow ratio was significantly reduced in smokers
when compared with non-smokers (0.86 ± 0.26 vs 1.33 ± 0.38,
p=0.02). CPT test using 3T MR imager allows for non-invasive
assessment of coronary endothelial dysfunction. |
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16:48 |
665. |
Reproducible Coronary Vessel Wall Imaging at 3T Using
Improved Motion Sensitized Driven Equilibrium (IMSDE)
Suzanne Gerretsen1,
Jinnan Wang2,3, Jeffrey H. Maki3,
Caroline Jaarsma1, Daniel Herzka4,
Boacheng Chu3, Vasily V. Yarnykh3,
Chun Yuan3, Tim V. Leiner1
1Radiology,
Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht,
Netherlands; 2Clinical Sites Research Program,
Philips Research North America, Seattle, WA, United States;
3Radiology, University of Washington, Seattle,
WA, United States; 4School of Medicine, Johns
Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States
This study investigated the
reproducibility of the recently developed improved Motion
Sensitized Driven Equilibrium (iMSDE) technique for MR
imaging of the coronary vessel wall at 3T. 19 volunteers
underwent MRI of the right coronary artery lumen and vessel
wall twice. Lumen diameter and vesselwall thickness
measurements were performed, and measurements of the two
scanning sessions were compared. In 15/19 volunteers two
measurements of both coronary lumen and vessel wall were
acquired successfully. This study demonstrated that iMSDE is
able to visualize the coronary vessel wall of healthy
volunteers at 3T with good reproducibility of lumen diameter
and wall thickness measurements. |
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17:00 |
666. |
Correlation of Atherosclerotic Plaque Compositions in
Coronary and Carotid Arteries
- not available
Qian Zhao1,
Xihai Zhao2, Jianming Cai3, Feiyu Li2,
Jianli Yang1, Chun Yuan2, Zulong Cai3
1Radiology,
The General Hospital of Beijing Military Area Command of
People's Liberation Army, Beijing, China; 2Radiology, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA, United States; 3Radiology, The General
Hospital of Chinese PLA, Beijing, China
Atherosclerosis has been
shown to be a systematic disease which often involves
multiple arterial vascular beds. Recently, a number of
studies demonstrated that there is a significant correlation
between coronary and carotid atherosclerosis. This study
sought to evaluate the association between coronary and
carotid plaque compositions. Our results showed coronary
plaque types significantly associating with carotid plaque
compositions. In particular, coronary mixed plaque might be
may be effective classifiers of carotid plaque compositions,
especially for carotid IPH. |
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17:12 |
667. |
Wall
Shear Stress as a Stimulus for Intra-Plaque Hemorrhage in
Carotid Atherosclerotic Plaque: An MRI-Based CFD Pilot Study
Gador Canton1, Huijun Chen1, Minako
Oikawa2, Hunter R. Underhill1, Wei Yu3,
Thomas S. Hatsukami4, Chun Yuan1,
William Sean Kerwin1
1Radiology,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States; 2Cardiovascular
Medicine, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan; 3Radiology,
Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Beijing; 4Surgery, University of Washington, Seattle,
WA, United States
The aim of this study was to
explore the hypothesis that intra-plaque hemorrhage, a
feature associated with adverse outcomes and atherosclerotic
plaque progression, is more likely to occur in plaques with
elevated levels of wall shear stress (WSS). We used
multi-sequence MRI to characterize seven human carotid
atherosclerotic plaques and an MRI-based computational fluid
dynamics (CFD) model to solve the equations governing the
blood flow. The results from this pilot study indicate a
possible link between the presence of hemorrhage within a
lipid-rich necrotic core in human carotid atherosclerotic
plaques and the shear stress force acting on the luminal
surface. |
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17:24 |
668. |
Identification of Lipid Deposits and Quantification of
Carotid Endarterectomy Plaque Components Using High
Resolution MRI and Image-Guided Proton MRS at 11.7T
Haiying Tang1, Vladimir Reiser1,
Zhi-Qiang Zhang1, Ting-Chuan Wang1,
Suzanne S. Eveland1, Zhu Chen1, Ben T.
Chen1, Edward A. O'Neill1, Michael
Klimas1
1Merck Research Laboratories,
Rahway, NJ, United States
Patients with carotid plaque
undergo endarterectomy based on empirical guidelines,
primarily the magnitude of stenosis. Patients who would
derive benefit from carotid endarterectomy are those with
lipid rich, vulnerable plaque at high risk of rupture. We
hypothesis that non-invasive MRI technique can provide
distinguishable signal features of plaque components such as
fibrous tissue, lipid-rich necrotic core, intra-plaque
hemorrhages, and calcifications, therefore can help identify
at-risk patients preoperatively. The purpose of this study
is to demonstrate the capability of MRI and MRS methods for
characterizing plaque composition and quantifying lipid
deposition, thereby facilitating development of noninvasive,
quantitative predictor of plaque stability. |
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17:36 |
669. |
3D
Projection Reconstruction Based Respiratory Motion
Correction Technique for Free-Breathing Coronary MRA
Himanshu Bhat1, Lan Ge1, Sonia
Nielles-Vallespin2, Sven Zuehlsdorff3,
Debiao Li1
1Radiology and
Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago,
IL, United States; 2Cardiovascular MR Unit, Royal
Brompton And Harefield NHS Foundation Trust, London, United
Kingdom; 3Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc.,
Chicago, IL, United States
Current navigator based
free-breathing coronary MRA techniques measure the position
of the diaphragm and use a fixed correlation factor to
estimate the position of the heart. Such techniques suffer
from errors due to the indirect estimation of heart position
and are plagued by low scan efficiencies (typically between
30 and 50 %). The purpose of this work was to develop a 3D
projection reconstruction (3D PR) based coronary MRA
technique which accepts all the data during the scan,
irrespective of respiratory position, and retrospectively
corrects for respiratory motion by using 3D image
registration. |
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17:48 |
670. |
Multimodality Imaging of Carotid Artery Plaques: 18F-FDG
PET, CT, and MRI
Robert Kwee1, Gerrit Teule, Robert van
Oostenbrugge, Werner Mess, Martin Prins, Rob van der Geest2,
Paul Hofman, Jos van Engelshoven, Joachim Wildberger, Eline
Kooi
1Maastricht University Medical Center,
Maastricht, Limburg, Netherlands; 2Leiden
University Medical Center, Leiden, The Netherlands
The present study
demonstrated that overall correlations between 18F-FDG PET
findings and morphological and compositional CT/MRI findings
of carotid plaques are weak. Correlations between CT and MRI
findings are moderate-to-strong, but measurements of
lipid-rich necrotic core and calcifications are
significantly larger at CT, whereas measurements of fibrous
tissue are significantly larger at MRI. There is also
considerable variation in absolute differences between CT
and MRI measurements, implying that CT and MRI are not
interchangeable. Future prospective longitudinal studies
should determine which imaging modality is most effective
for risk stratifying patients for stroke. |
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