16:30 |
0152. |
Accuracy of CMR Arterial
Spin labeling Method for Detecting Myocardial Ischemia: in
Comparison with PET
Jie Zheng1, David Muccigrosso1,
and Robert J. Gropler1
1Washington University, Saint Louis,
Missouri, United States
The accuracy of a CMR ASL method was evaluated in a
canine model of myocardial ischemia, in comparison with
PET in the same subject. There is very strong agreement
in myocardial blood flow between CMR ASL and PET,
despite that resting blood flow was underestimated by
CMR ASL. Myocardial flow reserve was comparable between
two imaging modalities.
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16:42 |
0153.
|
Detecting ACS and
Identifying Acute Ischemic Territories with Cardiac
Phase-Resolved BOLD MRI at Rest
Sotirios Tsaftaris1,2, Xiangzhi Zhou2,
Richard Tang3, James Min3, Debiao
Li2,3, and Rohan Dharmakumar2,3
1IMT - Institutions Markets Technologies,
Lucca, LU, Italy, 2Northwestern
University, Evanston, IL, United States, 3Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Noninvasive imaging approaches that can rapidly assess
an ongoing ischemia can be of great value in detecting
and triaging patients experiencing acute coronary
syndromes (ACS), particularly in cases of non ST
elevation myocardial infarction. We rely on detecting
systolic and diastolic SSFP signal changes related to
perturbation in cardiac phase-dependent blood volume and
oxygenation associated with severe coronary narrowing on
the basis of cardiac phase-resolved
Blood-Oxygen-Level-Dependent imaging. We show (in
canines) that we can assess functional/volumetric status
and non-invasively identify ischemic territories under
resting conditions in a single scan without any
exogenous contrast media.
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16:54 |
0154.
|
CAIPIRINHA accelerated
Myocardial First-Pass Perfusion Imaging with High Resolution
and Extended Coverage – A Patient Study
Daniel Stäb1, Felix A. Breuer2,
Christian Oliver Ritter1, Dietbert Hahn1,
and Herbert Köstler1
1Institute of Radiology, University of
Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany, 2Research
Center Magnetic Resonance Bavaria, Würzburg, Germany
Applying CAIPIRINHA with an acceleration factor higher
than the number of simultaneously acquired slices allows
accelerating the imaging procedure in slice and phase
encoding direction. The concept facilitates myocardial
first-pass perfusion imaging with high spatial
resolution and extended anatomic coverage of 6 to 8
slices every heart beat. In-vivo volunteer and patient
studies are presented showing excellent image quality at
a high spatial resolution of 2.0 x 2.0 mm2.
Being easy to implement and providing short
reconstruction times, the technique is suitable for
application in clinical routine.
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17:06 |
0155.
|
Three-Dimensional k-t PCA
Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Perfusion Imaging for
Quantification of Myocardial Ischemic Burden in Patients
with Coronary Artery Disease
Robert Manka1,2, Ingo Paetsch3,
Cosima Jahnke3, and Sebastian Kozerke1
1Institute for Biomedical Engineering,
University and ETH Zurich, Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Department
of Cardiology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich,
Zurich, Switzerland, 3Department
of Cardiology, University Hospital RWTH Aachen
Three-Dimensional Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Perfusion
Imaging offers high diagnostic performance with accurate
and reliable assessment of myocardial ischemic burden in
patients with coronary artery disease as defined by
fractional flow reserve measurements during invasive
coronary angiography.
|
17:18 |
0156.
|
Three-dimensional
first-pass cardiac perfusion MRI using a stack-of-spirals
aquisition
Taehoon Shin1, Krishna S Nayak2,
Juan M Santos3, Dwight G Nishimura1,
Bob S Hu3,4, and Michael V McConnell5
1Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States, 2Electrical
Engineering, University of Southern California, Los
Angeles, CA, United States, 3Heart
Vista Inc., Palo Alto, CA, United States, 4Palo
Alto Medical Foundation, Palo Alto, CA, United States, 5Cardiovascular
Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United
States
Three-dimensional first-pass myocardial perfusion
imaging (MPI) has shown great promise for precise sizing
of defects and for providing high perfusion contrast. It
remains an experimental approach primarily due to poor
spatial resolution and issues with motion. We have
developed a rapid 3D MPI method using a stack-of-spirals
acquisition accelerated by k-t SENSE, which allows
whole-heart coverage with 2.4x2.4x9 mm3 spatial
resolution. This approach correlates well with standard
2DFT method in terms of overall temporal dynamics and
upslope of time intensity curves.
|
17:30 |
0157. |
Comparison of Quantitative
Myocardial Perfusion from Self-gated and Gated Acquisitions
Edward DiBella1, Srikant K. Iyer1,
Ganesh Adluru1, Brian Martin1,
Devavrat Likhite1, Chris J. McGann2,
and Alexis Harrison2
1UCAIR/Radiology, University of Utah, Salt
Lake City, Utah, United States, 2Cardiology,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Dynamic contrast enhanced MRI for characterizing
perfusion in the myocardium is becoming a more robust
and useful clinical tool. Methods for ungated
acquisitions and retrospective self-gating were recently
introduced. Such ungated imaging could be valuable
whenever ECG-gating is poor, and in particular in
patients with arrhythmias. Here we compare a self-gated
perfusion acquisition directly to a gated acquisition in
subjects in sinus rhythm, to determine how well
quantitative perfusion values in ml/min/g can be
obtained with the self-gated approach.
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17:42 |
0158. |
Reperfusion
Intramyocardial Hemorrhage Following Acute Myocardial
Infarction: Assessment using Magnetic Resonance
Susceptibility Weighted High-Pass Filtered (HPF) Phase
Imaging
James Goldfarb1,2, Usama Hasan1,3,
Wenguo Zhao1, and Jing Han1
1Research and Education, St Francis Hospital,
Roslyn, New York, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, United
States,3New York College of Ostopathic
Medicine, Old Westbury, NY, United States
The major aim of this study was to quantitatively
investigate LV myocardial HPF-phase in gradient echo
images in normal subjects to determine normal ranges as
a function of TE and anatomical position and then
compare HPF-phase values in patients with myocardial
infarction of varying ages with normal ranges.
Myocardial high pass filtered myocardial phase is small
and normally varies by anatomical myocardial segment.
Myocardial hemorrhage causes a significant phase
decrease beyond these normal variations. HPF-phase
images represent a quantitative, high quality method for
the detection of myocardial hemorrhage without the need
for the presence or high quality visualization of
myocardial edema.
|
17:54 |
0159. |
Automated Area at Risk
Detection using Myocardial T1 maps acquired pre- and post
Contrast Agent Administration
permission withheld
Tobias Voigt1, Zhong Chen2,
Christian Buerger2,3, Valentina Puntmann2,
Reza Razavi2, Tobias Schaeffter2,
and Andrea J. Wiethoff2,4
1Philips Research, London, United Kingdom, 2King's
College London, London, United Kingdom, 3Philips
Research, Hamburg, Germany, 4Philips
Healthcare, Guildford, United Kingdom
This study presents a new method for automated
segmentation of blood pool, infarct area, healthy
myocardium and grey zone. A clustering algorithm was
implemented based on two quantitative T1 maps acquired
before and after contrast agent administration. First in
vivo results obtained in patients with known ischemic
cardiomyopathy (ICM) are shown and compared to late
enhancement images where good agreement was observed.
|
18:06 |
0160. |
Simultaneous Acquisition
of Quantitative ASL and T2* (SQUAB) for Characterization of
Skeletal Muscle Hemodynamics.
Ronn P Walvick1, Ruth P Lim1, and
Vivian S Lee2
1Radiology, New York University Langone
Medical Center, New York, NY, United States, 2The
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
BOLD and perfusion change rapidly in skeletal muscle
following exercise. In this work, we propose a sequence
that allows for simultaneous quantification of T2* and
ASL using a sequence featuring dual-echo EPI readouts,
and saturation prepared FAIR prepulses for blood
labeling. This sequence was tested in a cohort of
volunteers and a patient with peripheral arterial
disease. We show considerable increases in T2*and blood
flow from baseline following exercise in volunteers and
a blunted, delayed patient response. Our results show
the feasibility of quickly acquiring simultaneous blood
flow and T2* data and demonstrate sensitivity to disease
|
18:18 |
0161.
|
Influence of Nitroglycerin
for Combined Coronary Lumen and Vessel Wall Magnetic
Resonance Imaging
Tarique Hussain 1, Markus Henningsson 1,
Britta Butzbach 1, Marcelo Andia 1,
and Rene Botnar 1
1King's College London, London, England,
United Kingdom
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