Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
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Myocardial Tissue Characterization & Spectroscopy
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Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 14:30 |
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Computer # |
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3765.
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1 |
Is ribose and creatine
supplementation beneficial in chronic heart failure? An in
vivo 1H-MRS
/ 31P-MRS
/ cine-MRI study in murine hearts
Kiterie M.E. Faller1, Craig A. Lygate1,
Mahon L. Maguire1, Debra J. Medway1,
Victoria L. Thornton1, Stefan Neubauer1,
and Jurgen E. Schneider1
1Cardiovascular medicine, University of
Oxford, Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
The failing heart is characterised by a decrease in
myocardial creatine, adenine nucleotides, and
high-energy phosphate metabolites. In a mouse model of
permanent coronary artery ligation, we tested the
hypothesis whether simultaneous elevation of myocardial
creatine and ribose would be beneficial by increasing
cardiac energy availability. Using a combination of 1H-MRS, 31P-MRS,
cine-MRI to measure total creatine, phosphocreatine (PCr)/ATP
ratio, cardiac function/mass and infarct size, we did
not observe any beneficial or deleterious effect of this
therapeutic approach in post-infarct left ventricular
remodelling or function.
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3766. |
2 |
In Vivo Delineation
of Myocardial Infarction Using the Tractographic Propagation
Angle Correlates Strongly with Delayed Gadolinium
Enhancement
Choukri Mekkaoui1, Shuning Huang2,
Guangping Dai2, Timothy G Reese2,
Aravinda Thiagalingam3, Pal Horvat-Maurovich3,
Jeremy Ruskin3, Udo Hoffmann3,
Marcel P Jackowski4, and David E Sosnovik2
1Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United
States, 2Harvard
Medical School - Massachusetts General Hospital, 3Massachusetts
General Hospital,4University of São Paulo
Gadolinium cannot be given to patients with renal
disease. An urgent need thus exists to develop
techniques to image myocardial infarcts without the need
for exogenous contrast agents. Here we describe the use
of the tractographic propagation angle (PA) to detect
infarcted myocardium in
vivo. We show in infarcted mice and sheep that a PA
threshold of 10 degrees robustly detects infarcted
myocardium. We further show that infarct size derived
from the in
vivo PA
maps correlates extremely strongly with delayed
gadolinium enhancement. Hence, tractographic PA has the
potential to become a powerful tool in the
cardiovascular MRI armamentarium.
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3767. |
3 |
Cardiac Magnetic resonance
in clinical diagnosis of left left dominant phenotypes of of
arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy
Begoña Igual-Muñoz1, Esther Zorio-Grima2,
Vicente Martinez-Sanjuan3, JORDI ESTORNELL4,
JOSE MONMENEU4, PILAR LOPEZ-LEREU4,
and ALICIA MACEIRA4
1Cardiac image unit, ERESA, valencia,
valencia, Spain, 2cardiologia,
Unidad de muerte subita .Hospital la Fe . Valencia,
valencia, Spain, 3radiology,
ERESA, valencia, valencia, 4TAC-RM,
ERESA-HGUV, VALENCIA, VALENCIA, Spain
Recently, the spectrum of arrythmogenic miocardiopathy
(AC) has been expanded with newly described
biventricular (BVAC) and left-dominant (LDAC) forms.
Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) with its superb tisular
discrimination abilities, and high reproducibility for
ventricular volume calculation,offers potentially
relevant information for their diagnosis.
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3768. |
4 |
Ex-vivo Study of the Human
Heart with Diffusion Tensor Imaging: Sensitivity to
Cardiovascular Risk Factors
Neville D Gai1, Evrim Turkbey1,
and David A Bluemke1,2
1Radiology & Imaging Sciences, National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States, 2NIBIB,
Bethesda, MD, United States
Diffusion tensor studies of the human heart have shown
differences in certain measured DTI parameters between
normal and infracted myocardium or in heart failure
patients. Sensitivity of DTI to cardiac disease using a
graded approach has not hitherto been undertaken. In
this study of the ex-vivo human heart, global diffusion
tensor and tractography related measurements were
correlated with the probability of cardiac disease based
on the Framingham risk score. Fiber length showed
marginal correlation with cardiac disease risk while FA,
ADC and eigenvalues showed poor correlation.
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3769. |
5 |
Myocardial T2 mapping, a
Quantitative tool for evaluation of myoarditis
Darshit Thakrar 1, Jeremy Collins 1,
Rahul Rustogi 1, Asad A Usman 1, Aya
Kino 1, and James Carr 1
1Cardiovascular imaging, Northwestern
memorial hospital, Chicago, IL, United States
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3770. |
6 |
EFFECT OF SYSTEMATIC T1
ERRORS ON LAMBDA CALCULATIONS: COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT T1
MAPPING TECHNIQUES
Jacqueline A Flewitt1, Kelvin Chow2,
Joseph J Pagano2, Jordin D Green3,
Matthias G Friedrich1, and Richard B Thompson2
1Stephenson CMR Centre, University of
Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 2Biomedical
Engineering, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta,
Canada,3Siemens Healthcare, Calgary, Alberta,
Canada
Quantitative myocardial T1 mapping is the technique of
choice for fibrosis and has been combined with blood T1
measurements (pre and post gadolinium) to calculate the
less time and dose sensitive blood-tissue partition
coefficient (lambda). However, systematic errors have
been reported in the popular MOLLI T1 mapping techniques
and the effects on lambda have not been explored. In a
study of 10 healthy volunteers, blood and myocardial T1
values were compared using MOLLI and a SAturation-recovery
single-SHot Acquisition (SASHA) method. Systematic T1
measurement differences were found between the
techniques, resulting in MOLLI-derived lambdas that are
22% greater than those calculated using SASHA.
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3771. |
7 |
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
of Normal and Ablated Cardiac Left Atrial Specimens
Osama M Abdullah1, Ashvin K George2,
Nassir F Marrouche2, and Edward W Hsu1
1Department of Bioengineering, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States, 2CARMA
Center and Division of Cardiology, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, UT, United States
The structure of the left atrium (LA) plays an important
role in its electrophysiological dynamics, and has been
implicated in diseases such as atrial fibrillation (AF).
Detailed dissections of the atrial wall transmurally
have revealed a complex architecture of overlapping
myofibers of different orientations. Diffusion tensor
imaging (DTI) has emerged as a non-destructive
alternative to histology to study highly ordered tissue
structures including the myocardium. The goals of the
current study are to determine (a) if DTI is sensitive
to the heterogeneous and anisotropic microstructure of
the LA, and (b) if DTI can detect alterations of the
microstructure following RF ablation procedures, which
is commonly used in the treatment of AF.
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3772. |
8 |
Heterogeneous
Distributions of Myocardial Steatosis – An Ex-Vivo
Evaluation
Chia-Ying Liu1, Yuan Chang Liu1,
Bharath Ambale Venkatesh1, Joao A.C. Lima1,
David A Bluemke2, and Charles Steenbergen1
1Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States, 2National
Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, United States
The purpose of this study was to characterize the
distribution of intramyocellular lipid content and to
determine its association with disease characteristics.
1H-MRS was performed on formalin-fixed slices of human
hearts at various circumferential locations (N=55). We
found fat content increases with age and fat
distribution may be heterogeneous when associated with
cardiovascular disease.
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3773. |
9 |
Validation of a Faster
Modified Look-Locker Inversion-recovery (MOLLI) method for
myocardial T1 mapping on 3T MRI
Yoshiaki Morita1, Naoaki Yamada1,
Teruo Noguchi2, Hiromi Hashimura1,
Suzu Kanzaki1, Masahiro Higashi1,
Hiroaki Naito1, Katsutoshi Murata3,
and Andreas Greiser4
1Department of Radiology, National Cerebral
and Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 2Division
of Cardiology, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular
Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 3Siemens
Japan K.K., Tokyo, Japan, 4Siemens
AG, Erlangen, Germany
Modified Look-Locker Inversion-recovery (MOLLI) sequence
provides high resolution T1 map of myocardium. However,
long breath holds often limit clinical application in
patients due to motion artifact and heart rate
variability. In this study, we proposed a faster MOLLI
method that decreased by about one-third the acquisition
time compared with the original-MOLLI, on 3T clinical
machine. The proposed fast-MOLLI sequence is a rapid and
reliable method for T1 estimation, with results very
close to the original-MOLLI (mean T1 : fast-MOLLI
1140}43msec , original-MOLLI 1142}50msec). The
fast-MOLLI will be of great help to understand the
myocardial tissue characterization in various heart
diseases.
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3774. |
10 |
ONSET OF CARDIAC IRON
LOADING IN A LARGE AND HOMOGENOUS COHORT OF THALASSEMIA
MAJOR PEDIATRIC PATIENTS
Antonella Meloni1, Aldo Filosa2,
Vincenzo Positano1, Daniele De Marchi1,
Letizia Gulino1, Claudio Ascioti3,
Massimo Midiri4, Gianluca Valeri5,
Massimo Lombardi1, and Alessia Pepe1
1Cardiovascular MR Unit, Fondazione G.
Monasterio CNR-Regione Toscana and Institute of Clinical
Physiology, Pisa, Italy, 2UOC
Pediatria - DH Talassemia, AORNA. Cardarelli, Napoli,
Italy, 3Struttura
Complessa di Cardioradiologia-UTIC, P.O. “Giovanni Paolo
II”, Italy, 4Istituto
di Radiologia, Policlinico "Paolo Giaccone", Palermo,
Italy, 5Dipartimento
di Radiologia, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria
Ospedali Riuniti "Umberto I-Lancisi-Salesi", Ancona,
Italy
The MRI screening for both cardiac iron overload and
function assessment can be started for thalassemia major
patients at the age of 7 years. At this age not sedation
is generally needed. If the availability of cardiac MRI
is low, the serum ferritin levels could be used as a
discriminating factor.
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3775. |
11 |
Biexponential diffusion
tensor analysis of myocardial structural alteration in
rabbit models with myocardium infarction
Yin Wu1,2, Chao Zou1,2, Wei Liu1,2,
Wei Yang1,2, Ke Jiang1,2, and Ed
X. Wu3,4
1Paul C. Lauterbur Research Center for
Biomedical Imaging, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced
Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong, China, 2Key
Lab of Health Informatics, Chinese Academy of Sciences,
Shenzhen, Guangdong, China, 3Laboratory
of Biomedical Imaging and Signal Processing, The
University of Hong Kong, Pukfulam, Hong Kong, 4Department
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Hong Kong, Pokfulam, Hong Kong
Water diffusion behavior in some tissues was found to
not comply with Gaussian manner, leading to diffusion
strength dependence of DTI index characterization. In
this study, infarcted myocardial structural alteration
was investigated using biexponential model, which was
proved to better fit of diffusion signal decay. DTI
results showed that in both infarct and adjacent regions
fast radial diffusivity increased due to extracellular
and microvascular compartment augmentation along radial
direction, leading to enhancement of fast mean
diffusivity. Meanwhile, decrease of both fast and slow
FA was observed as result of fiber integrity loss and
fast radial diffusivity enhancement. These findings were
validated by histological observations. The current
study suggested that biexponential diffusion function
could be utilized as a tool to monitor and detect
myocardial morphological alteration and structural
degradation by probing multi-compartment diffusion
behavior compared to conventional used monoexponential
diffusion model.
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3776. |
12 |
Feasibility of Dynamic 4D
Whole Heart Viability Imaging Within a Single Breath-Hold
Using Highly Accelerated Parallel Imaging and Compressed
Sensing
Jian Xu1,2, Li Feng1, Ricardo
Otazo1, Barbara Srichai1, Ruth Lim1,
Bhat Himanshu3, Kelly Anne Mcgorty1,
Joseph Reaume1, and Daniel Sodickson1
1Center for Biomedical Imaging, Radiology,New
York University, New York, NY, United States, 2PolyTechnic
Institute of New York University and Siemens Medical
Solutions USA Inc., New York, NY, United States, 3Siemens
Medical Solutions USA Inc., Charlestown, MA, United
States
Myocardium viability imaging via late gadolinium
hyper-enhancement (LGE) is usually imaged with an
inversion recovery sequence. A multi-slice multi-planar
2D approach with an additional TI scout is commonly used
in routine clinical practice. Highly accelerated whole
volume LGE enables acquisition of all data at the same
time point of contrast kinetics is desired. We evaluated
the feasibility of whole heart dynamic 4D LGE imaging
utilizing different TIs at different phases throughout
the entire cardiac cycle within a single BH using 4D
stack-of-star radial acquisition and k-t RASPS without
the use of a precise TI scout.
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3777. |
13 |
Magnetic Field Dependence
of Myocardial R2* Values and Segmental Myocardial Field
Inhomogeneity Assessed at 1.5 T, 3.0 T and 7.0 T.
Antonella Meloni1, Fabian Hezel2,
Vincenzo Positano1, Petra Keilberg1,
Alessia Pepe1, Thoralf Niendorf2,3,
and Massimo Lombardi1
1Cardiovascular MR Unit, Fondazione G.
Monasterio CNR-Regione Toscana and Institute of Clinical
Physiology, Pisa, Pisa, Italy, 2Berlin
Ultrahigh Field Facility B.U.F.F, Max-Delbrueck Center
for Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany, 3Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charité Campus
Buch, Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
Although R2* relaxation is a complicated process, our
results suggest a nearly linear field dependence of
cardiac R2*. Admittedly, at 7T the pronounced propensity
to macroscopic susceptibility artefacts is challenging
and it seemed to spare only the septal regions. The most
severe artifact source was the heart-lung interface.
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3778. |
14 |
Myocardial infarct
heterogeneity and papillary muscle involvement correlated
with appropriate ICD therapy in patients with ischemic heart
disease
Yuesong Yang1, Kim A. Connelly2,
Subodh B. Joshi2, Tawfiq Zeidan-Shwiri3,
Gideon A. Paul3, John J. Graham2,
Rhonda Walcarius1, Alexander J. Dick4,
Eugene Crystal3, and Graham A. Wright1
1Imaging Research and IRCCI, Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada, 2Cardiology,
St.Michael's Hospital, Toronto, ON, Canada,3Cardiology,
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada, 4Cardiology,
Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada
Recent studies indicated that myocardial infarct
heterogeneity measured on cardiac MRI might predict the
appropriate ICD therapy in patients with ischemic heart
disease (IHD). However, it is unknown whether papillary
muscle involvement (PM-MI) in these patients may play a
role in the prediction of appropriate ICD therapy. In
this study, we investigated the correlation of
myocardial infarct heterogeneity and PM-MI evaluated by
cardiac MRI with the appropriate ICD therapy in patients
with IHD after ICD implantation.
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3779. |
15 |
3D, Free Breathing Late
Gadolinium Enhanced Myocardial Imaging with Retrospective TI
Selection and Isotropic Resolution
Steven Kecskemeti1, Kevin Johnson1,
Mark Schiebler1, Chris Francois1,
and Orhan Unal1
1University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin,
United States
A free breathing, respiratory gated 3D radial inversion
recovery acquisition with retrospective inversion time
(TI) and isotropic resolution is used for late
gadolinium enhanced imaging of myocardium.
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3780. |
16 |
Human cardiac T1 mapping
in vivo at 7T: quantifying and correcting for partial
inversion
C. T. Rodgers1, S. K. Piechnik1,
L. DelaBarre2, P.-F. Van de Moortele2,
C. J. Snyder2, S. Neubauer1, M. D
Robson1, and J. T. Vaughan2
1University of Oxford, Oxford, United
Kingdom, 2University
of Minnesota, United States
Quantitative mapping of myocardial T1 has
proved valuable at 1.5 and 3T. In a pilot study, we
began to adapt the ShMOLLI T1 mapping
sequence for 7T. We now quantify the achievable
magnetization inversion in the heart at 7T and to
optimize T1 measurements
there. To achieve this, we make further improvements to
the pulse sequence and post-processing, validating these
with phantom experiments. Scans on 6 volunteers measure
the human myocardial T1 at
7T as 1926 ± 22ms. Our data suggest that future
measurements may be feasible on scanners with 8kW RF
output, in a single reasonably short breath hold.
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3781. |
17 |
Evaluation of Cardiac
Amyloidosis with T1 Mapping
Michael Salerno1,2, and Christopher M Kramer3,4
1Internal Medicine, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, Va, United States, 2Radiology,
Univeristy of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United
States,3Radiology, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA, United States, 4Internal
Medicine, Cardiology, Univeristy of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA, United States
Cardiac Amyloidosis is characterized by extracellular
deposition of amyloid protein within the myocardium. We
use T1 mapping techniques to demonstrate an increase in
the volume of distribution and partition coefficient of
gadolinium in patients with cardiac amyloidosis as
compared to normal volunteers.
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3782. |
18 |
Toward Assessment of Iron
Overload Diseases at 7.0 T: Myocardial T2* Mapping
To Derive Global and Segmental T2* Norm
Values For Healthy Subjects at 7.0 T
Fabian Hezel1, Antonella Meloni2,
Jeanette Schulz-Menger1,3, Petra Keilberg2,
Peter Kellman4, Massimo Lombardi2,
and Thoralf Niendorf1,3
1Berlin Ultrahigh Field Facility, MDC Berlin,
Berlin, Germany, 2Cardiovascular
MR Unit, Fondazione G. Monasterio CNR-Regione Toscana
and Institute of Clinical Physiology, Pisa, Italy, 3Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charité Campus
Buch, Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany,4Laboratory
of Cardiac Energetics, National Institutes of
Health/NHLBI, Bethesda, MD, United States
Myocardial T2* mapping is of proven clinical value for
the detection of iron overload. Ultrahigh field (>7T)
offer a gain in susceptibility sensitivity, however T2*
relaxation rates of healthy myocardium obtained at 1.5T
and 3.0T need to be revised. This study aims to
determine T2* relaxation times for normal myocardium
(global and segmental) in healthy subjects with the
ultimate goal to establish a lower limit of normal T2*
at 7.0T.
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3783. |
19 |
Myocardial T1 mapping
using a faster Modified Look-Locker Inversion-recovery
(fast-MOLLI) method on 3T MRI : Quantification of myocardial
fibrosis in dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM)
Yoshiaki Morita1, Naoaki Yamada1,
Teruo Noguchi2, Hiromi Hashimura1,
Suzu Kanzaki1, Masahiro Higashi1,
Hiroaki Naito1, Katsutoshi Murata3,
and Andreas Greiser4
1Department of Radiology, National Cerebral
and Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 2Division
of Cardiology, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular
Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan, 3Siemens
Japan K.K., Tokyo, Japan, 4Siemens
AG, Erlangen, Germany
Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) is the widely used
method to evaluate the myocardial fibrosis in various
heart diseases. However, the standard LGE using
null-point method has a limitation in diagnosis of
diffuse interstitial fibrosis. This study demonstrated
that pre-contrast and post-contrast myocardial T1
mapping using a faster MOLLI method enable direct
myocardial signal quantification and can help to
evaluate the diffuse fibrotic change even that show
apparently unenhanced myocardium on LGE images, in
patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM).
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3784. |
20 |
Assessment of cardiac iron
deposition in sickle cell disease using 3.0 Tesla MRI
El-Sayed H Ibrahim1, Fauzia Rana2,
Kevin Johnson1, and Richard White1
1Department of Radiology, University of
Florida, Jacksonville, FL, United States, 2Department
of Medicine, University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL,
United States
Cardiac iron overload in sickle-cell disease (SCD) leads
to heart-failure and death. This study investigates the
potential role of 3.0T-MRI for assessing cardiac iron
content by measuring R2*. R2* was measured in calibrated
phantoms at 3.0T and 1.5T using optimized sequences.
Myocardial R2* was measured in SCD patients at 3.0T,and
results were compared to serum ferritin and hepatic R2*.
The phantoms R2* at 3.0T were double those at 1.5T. R2*
showed linear relationships with iron concentration.
3.0T-R2* was more sensitive than 1.5T in detecting low
iron concentrations. Myocardial R2* had weak and good
correlations with hepatic R2* and ferritin
level,respectively.
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3785. |
21 |
Phase Sensitive Fat
Darkening by TI-Minimized Double SPAIR (PHATTI DeSPAIR) for
Robust and Highly Effective Fat Suppression in Clinical
T1-Weighted Imaging of Ischemic and Non-Ischemic Heart
Disease
Elizabeth R Jenista1, David C Wendell1,
Deneen M Spatz1, Christoph Jensen1,
Lowie MR Van Assche1, Enn-Ling Chen1,
Stephen S Darty1, Raymond J Kim1,
and Wolfgang G Rehwald2
1Duke Cardiovascular MR Center, Duke
University, Durham, NC, United States, 2Cardiovascular
MR R&D, Siemens Healthcare, Chapel Hill, NC, United
States
We present a highly effective and robust fat suppression
technique for T1-weighted inversion recovery (IR)
imaging such as delayed enhancement, that is compatible
with phase sensitive IR (PSIR) imaging. It combines a
double-SPAIR (Spectral Selection Attenuated Inversion
Recovery) module with a fat-TI minimization and a phase
sensitive readout. It is called phase sensitive fat
darkening by TI-minimized double SPAIR, PHATTI DeSPAIR.
We compared its performance to standard chemically
selective fat saturation in 13 patients with ischemic
and non-ischemic heart disease, at 1.5T and 3T. Fat
suppression efficiency was extremely strong compared to
the standard technique, without affecting signal to
noise.
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3786. |
22 |
Evaluation of Diffuse
Myocardial Fibrosis in Hypertensive Left Ventricular
Hypertrophy
Michael Salerno1,2, Rajesh Janardhanan3,
Nebiyu Adenaw3, Ronny S Jiji3,
Frederick H Epstein2,4, and Christopher M
Kramer2,5
1Internal Medicine, Cardiology, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Va, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United
States, 3Internal
Medicine, Cardiology, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA, United States, 4Biomedical
Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
VA, United States, 5Internal
Medicine, Cardiology, University of Virgina,
Charlottesville, VA, United States
Diffuse myocardial fibrosis can occur in hypertensive
left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and is not detectable
by conventional late gadolinium enhanced imaging. We
utilized T1 mapping techniques to quantify myocardial
fibrosis by determining the partition coefficient and
volume of distribution of Gd-DTPA. We demonstrate a
significant increase in these parameters in hypertensive
patients with LVH as compared to age matched normal
controls.
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3787.
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23 |
Are the preferential
patterns of myocardial iron overload preserved at the CMR
follow-up?
Antonella Meloni1, Vincenzo Positano1,
Daniele De Marchi1, Elisabetta Chiodi2,
Massimiliano Missere3, Antonino Vallone4,
Massimo Midiri5, Letizia Gulino1,
Roberta Renni6, Massimo Lombardi1,
and Alessia Pepe1
1Cardiovascular MR Unit, Fondazione G.
Monasterio CNR-Regione Toscana and Institute of Clinical
Physiology, Pisa, Italy, 2Servizio
Radiologia Ospedaliera-Universitaria, Arcispedale “S.
Anna”, Ferrara, Italy, 3Centro
di Ricerca e Formazione ad Alta Tecnologia nelle Scienze
Biomediche "Giovanni Paolo II", Università Cattolica del
Sacro Cuore, Campobasso, Italy, 4Istituto
di Radiologia, Az. Osp. "Garibaldi" Presidio Ospedaliero
Nesima, Catania, Italy, 5Istituto
di Radiologia, Policlinico "Paolo Giaccone", Palermo,
Italy, 6Day
Hospital, Ospedale Civile “F. Ferrari”, Casarano, Lecce,
Italy
In thalassemia major patients a preferential pattern of
iron store in anterior and inferior regions was present
at both basal and FU CMRs, with an increment of T2*
values at FU due to a basal CMR-guided chelation
therapy.
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3788. |
24 |
Creatine
Kinase-Overexpression Improves Adriamycin-induced
Dysfunction and in vivo ATP kinetics in Murine Hearts
Ashish Gupta1, Cory Rohlfsen1,
Missy Leppo1, Vadappuram P Chacko2,
Yibin Wang3, and Robert G Weiss1
1Department of Medicine, Division of
Cardiology, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,
United States, 2Department
of Radiology, Division of Magnetic Resonance Research,
The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 3University
of California, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Adriamycin (ADR) is a commonly used life-saving
antineoplastic agent that also causes dose-dependent
cardiotoxicity. Impaired energy metabolism may
contribute to contractile dysfunction in human heart
failure and may play a role in ADR-induced
cardiotoxicity. We overexpressed the myofibrillar
isoform of creatine kinase (CK-M), the major cardiac
energy reserve reaction, to test the hypothesis that
increasing CK-M expression would improve energy
metabolism and, in turn, improve contractile function in
dysfunctional ADR hearts. 1H MRI and 31P MRS results
reveal that CK-M overexpression improves depressed CK
energetics and cardiac dysfunction in ADR hearts.
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Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
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Cardiovascular Function: Experimental Models & Humans
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
14:30 - 15:30 |
|
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|
Computer # |
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3789. |
1 |
Progressive Alteration of
Regional Principal Strain Magnitude and Orientation during
Post-Infarct Left Ventricular Remodeling
Kevin J Koomalsingh1, Jeremy R McGarvey1,
Chun Xu1, Gerald A Zsido1, Kristen
Dillard1, Christina Lau1,
Gabrielle Pilla1, Norihiro Kondo1,
Manabu Takebe1, Walter RT Witschey1,
Melissa M Levack1, Larry Dougherty1,
Joseph H Gorman III1, Robert C Gorman1,
and James J Pilla1
1University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
PA, United States
Cardiac function after infarction is impaired due to
deceased contracting myocardium and mechanical effects
on the normal myocardium. Following myocardial
infarction changes in infarct material properties alter
regional wall strain during left ventricular remodeling.
Results show a significant decrease in strain magnitude
for all regions acutely post infarct with strain
increasing in the border zone and infarct chronically.
Strain angle for all regions at baseline are aligned
with the radial direction signifying wall thickening
while as the infarct heals the infarct and border zone
angles become less radial indicating stretch. This
stretch is potentially the stimulus for remodeling.
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3790. |
2 |
Regional analysis of
3-directional myocardial velocities acquired in a
breath-hold with efficient retrogated spiral phase velocity
mapping
Robin Simpson1, Jennifer Keegan1,
Peter Gatehouse1, and David Firmin1
1Imperial College, London, England, United
Kingdom
Myocardial phase velocity mapping is capable of
determining regional myocardial motion. We have
developed a sequence which uses spiral k-space coverage
and retrospective cardiac gating to allow the
determination of 3-directional velocities over the
entire cardiac cycle in a slice within a breath-hold.
The acquired spatial and temporal resolution is
sufficient to identify all the main features of motion
and because of the retrospective gating the end
diastolic atrial kick is clearly seen. The presented
results demonstrate the regional variations in motion
both within a slice and between different slices. Inter
subject variability is also demonstrated.
|
3791.
|
3 |
Cine DENSE for Assessment
of Diastolic function: Pulse Sequence Development and
Initial Results.
Bhairav Bipin Mehta1, Andrew D. Gilliam2,
Frederick H. Epstein1,3, and Michael Salerno3,4
1Department of Biomedical Engineering,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia,
United States, 2A.D.
Gilliam Consulting, Providence, Rhode Island, United
States, 3Department
of Radiology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
Virginia, United States, 4Department
of Medicine, Cardiology Division University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HF-PEF)
resulting primarily from diastolic dysfunction accounts
for more than half of all heart failure cases.
Echocardiography is commonly used to assess diastolic
function but has limitations affecting its measurement
accuracy. Strain and strain rate measurement using cine
DENSE MRI has advantages over echocardiographic
techniques and could improve the diagnosis of diastolic
dysfunction. Previous cine DENSE sequences have
primarily imaged systole. With these sequences, SNR has
degraded by mid-diastole, yielding inaccurate
displacement measurements and strains. Here we modified
a systolic cine DENSE sequence to image diastole with
sufficient SNR to compute accurate diastolic
displacements, strains, and strain rates.
|
3792.
|
4 |
The Effect of Left Bundle
Branch Block and Heart Failure on Circumferential Right
Ventricular Dyssynchrony and Function: Assessment with MR
Cine DENSE
Daniel A. Auger 1, Bruce S. Spottiswoode 1,2,
Loren P. Budge 3, Xiaodong Zhong 4,
Frederick H. Epstein 5, and Kenneth C.
Bilchick 3
1MRC/UCT Medical Imaging Research Unit,
University of Cape Town, Cape Town, Western Cape, South
Africa, 2Division
of Radiology, University of Stellenbosch, Cape Town,
Western Cape, South Africa, 3Department
of Medicine/Cardiovascular Division, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States, 4MR
R&D Collaborations, Siemens Healthcare, Atlanta,
Georgia, United States, 5Departments
of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
|
3793. |
5 |
Early diastolic function
observed in canine model of reperfused transmural myocardial
infarction using high temporal resolution MR imaging
Ziheng Zhang1, Donald P Dione2,
Ben A Lin2, James S Duncan3,
Albert J Sinusas2, and Smita Sampath1
1Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Yale
University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United
States, 2Department
of Medicine, Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Yale
University School of Medicine, 3Department
of Biomedical Engineering and Diagnostic Radiology, Yale
University
The functional mechanisms involved in adverse left
ventricular remodeling caused by reperfusion injury are
unclear. We have developed a new high temporal
resolution MR imaging technique, SPAMM-PAV (SPAtially
Modulated Magnetization with Polarity Alternated
Velocity encoding) that provides regional assessment of
early diastolic flow velocity and myocardial strain.
This method was applied in a canine animal model with
prolonged occlusion followed by reperfusion. We examine
the diastolic strain-rates, elastic modulus and
viscosity of infarct regions relative to remote regions
3 days post reperfusion to provide insight into early
diastolic function in these animals.
|
3794. |
6 |
Measuring the Radial
Component of Left Ventricular Strain with Circular Tagging:
Feasibility and Initial Results.
Maryam Haftekhanaki1, Abbas N Moghaddam1,2,
Khaled Abd-Elmoniem3, and J. Paul Finn2
1Biomedical Engineering, Tehran Polytechnic,
Tehran, Tehran, Iran, 2Radiology,
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Biomedical
and Metabolic Imaging Branch, NIDDK, NIH
LV wall thickening, the main factor of systolic
ejection, is reflected in radial strain. This strain was
locally measured in this study, from the circularly
tagged images, through a K-space based compression
encoding method. The results were compared to the strain
measurement from HARP and general agreement was
confirmed. The proposed method does not need to any
tracking or differentiation for strain measurement and
therefoere, it has potential advantages over other
methods in practicality, computational cost and
accuracy.
|
3795. |
7 |
Magnetic Resonance
Elastography Derived Stiffness as a Method to Estimate
Myocardial Contractility.
Arunark Kolipaka1, Shivani R Aggarwal2,
Kiaran P McGee3, Nandan Anavekar4,
Armando Manduca3, Richard Ehman3,
and Philip Araoz3
1Radiology, The Ohio State University Medical
Center, Columbus, Ohio, United States, 2Medicine,
Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC,
United States, 3Radiology,
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States, 4Cardiovascular
Diseases, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States
Contractility is the intrinsic ability of the heart to
contract independent of preload and afterload. Recently,
MR elastography (MRE) has been adapted to measure
stiffness in the myocardium. The purpose of this study
is to determine whether increasing left ventricular (LV)
myocardial contractility by epinephrine infusion in an
in vivo pig model is associated with increase in
end-systolic (E-S) MRE-derived effective myocardial
stiffness. MRE was performed on 5 pigs with incremental
infusion of epinephrine to increase the heart rate by
20% from baseline. E-S MRE-derived effective myocardial
stiffness increased linearly with increasing heart rate
with epinephrine infusion.
|
3796. |
8 |
Tissue phase mapping
analysis of myocarial function after heart transplantation
Marius Menza1, Bernd Andre Jung1,
Adriana Komancsek1, Tobias Wengenmayer2,
Anna Lena Stroh2, and Daniela Föll2
1Radiology, Medical Physics, Univesity
Medical Center, Freiburg, Germany, 2Cardiology
and Angiology, Univesity Medical Center, Freiburg
MR tissue phase mapping (TPM) was used to quantify
segmental myocardial velocities including rotation in
stable patients after heart transplantation (HTX, n=14)
without signs of rejection. Reduced regional long-axis
velocities in systole and diastole were revealed in most
left ventricular segments compared to healthy volunteers
(n=18). HTX patients demonstrated a slightly lower
apical rotation and a lower peak of early systolic
counterclockwise rotation at the base. A comprehensive
description of rotation and twist in the transplanted
heart is essential for further studies of HTX rejection
and TPM might therefore help to improve the follow-up of
these patients in future.
|
3797. |
9 |
Albiglutide, a long
lasting glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, protects
the rat heart against ischemia/reperfusion injury: Evidence
for improving cardiac metabolic efficiency
Hasan Alsaid1, Weike Bao2,
Thimmaiah Chendrimada2, Matthew Szapacs3,
David R Citerone3, Mark R Harpel2,
Robert N Willette2, John J Lepore2,
and Beat M Jucker1
1Preclinical & Translational Imaging,
GlaxoSmithKline, King of Prussia, PA, United States, 2Heart
Failure DPU, GlaxoSmithKline, King of Prussia, PA,
United States, 3Platform
Technology and Science, GlaxoSmithKline, King of
Prussia, PA, United States
Albiglutide is a novel GLP-1 analog in clinical
development for Type 2 diabetes. In the present study,
albiglutide was shown to reduce myocardial infarct size
and improved post-ischemic cardiac function and
energetics by combined in vivo MRI/MRS following
myocardial I/R injury. The observed benefits were
associated with enhanced myocardial glucose uptake and
shift toward a more energetically favorable substrate
metabolism profile by increasing both glucose and
lactate oxidation as assessed by ex vivo MRS. These
findings suggest that in addition to providing
peripheral glycemic control, albiglutide may have direct
therapeutic potential for improving cardiac energetic
and function in the setting of myocardial ischemic
injury.
|
3798. |
10 |
Quantitative Assessment of
Highly Accelerated Real Time Cardiac Cine MRI Using
Compressed Sensing and Parallel Imaging
Li Feng1,2, Monvadi Barbara Srichai-Parsia1,
Ruth P Lim1, Alexis Harrison3,
Wilson King4, Ganesh Adluru5,
Edward Dibella5, Daniel Sodickson1,
Ricardo Otazo1, and Daniel Kim5
1Radiology, New York University School of
Medicine, New York, New York, United States, 2Sackler
Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, New York
University School of Medicine, New York, New York,
United States, 3Internal
Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah,
United States, 4Division
of Pediatric Cardiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, Utah, United States, 5Radiology,
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
Accurate assessment of cardiac size and function plays
an important role in diagnosis and management of various
heart diseases. For patients with impaired breath-hold
capacity or arrhythmias, real time cine imaging may be
more useful. Recently, highly accelerated real time cine
imaging using a combination of compressed sensing and
parallel imaging has been proposed with eight-fold
acceleration. While this technique is promising for
clinical applications, it has not been validated. The
purpose of this study was to validate the relative
accuracy of accelerated real time cine MRI for
quantitative assessment of ventricular volumes and
function in healthy human volunteers.
|
3799. |
11 |
SAR-efficient 3D Cardiac
CINE with Respiratory-Triggered RF Gating
Markus Henningsson1, Beth Goddu2,
Lois Goepfert2, Kraig V Kissinger2,
Raymond H Chan2, Reza Razavi1,
Rene M Botnar1, Tobias Schaeffter1,
and Reza Nezafat2
1Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical
Engineering, King's College London, London, United
Kingdom, 2Beth
Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School,
Boston, Massachussets, United States
3D CINE MRI provides functional volumetric coverage of
the heart, however problems associated with this
approach are poor contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and high
specific absorption rate (SAR). Therefore, 2D CINE is
preferred in clinical practice. Here we address the
problems associated with 3D CINE by gating the
radiofrequency pulses using an external respiratory
sensor (bellows) to coincide with the image data
acquisition. We evaluate this approach in 5 healthy
volunteers. The results show a 50% lower SAR and higher
CNR and signal-to-noise ratio, comparable to 2D CINE, as
switching off the RF allows for T1 recovery of the
tissue.
|
3800. |
12 |
Left Ventricular
Asynchrony Quantification by Means of Myocardial
Displacement Derived from Velocity Encoded MRI
Jan Paul1, Anja Lutz1, Peter
Bernhardt1, Patrick Etyngier2,
Wolfgang Rottbauer1, and Volker Rasche1
1Department of Internal Medicine II,
University Hospital of Ulm, Ulm, Baden-Württemberg,
Germany, 2Medisys
Research Lab, Philips Healthcare, Sureness, France
Many motion parameters obtained from tagged MRI data
have been applied previously to quantify motion
abnormalities, for decreasing the non-responder rate of
about 30 % in Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy (CRT).
In the study presented here, segment-wise wall motion is
tracked from velocity encoded MRI and displacement is
computed. Parameters based on displacement are then
analyzed for the distinction between healthy volunteers
and patients with abnormal motion patterns.
|
3801. |
13 |
Free breathing measurement
of ventricular volumes from magnitude data of 4D
flow-sensitive MRI in a canine model of acute pulmonary
arterial hypertension
Alejandro Roldan-Alzate1, Leif Jensen1,
Alex Frydrychowicz2, Scott K Nagle1,
Heidi Kellihan3, Naomi Chesler4,
Oliver Wieben1,5, and Christopher J François1
1Radiology, University of Wisconsin, Madison,
WI, United States, 2Radiology,
Universitatsklinikum Schleswig-Holstein, Lubeck,
Germany, 3Veterinary
Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United
States, 4Biomedical
Engineering, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI,
United States, 5Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, United
States
4D flow-sensitive MRI is increasingly being used for
hemodynamic analyses of cardiovascular diseases,
including pulmonary arterial hypertension. PC VIPR is a
time-efficient 4D flow-sensitive MRI technique, using
radial undersampling, to obtain high spatial resolution
data with a large volume of coverage. In this study we
validated the use of PC VIPR magnitude data for the
quantification of right and left ventricular volumes in
a canine model of acute pulmonary arterial hypertension.
|
3802. |
14 |
Rapid T2 mapping of mouse
heart using CPMG sequence and compressed sensing
reconstruction
Yong Chen1, Wen Li1, Kai Jiang1,
and Xin Yu1,2
1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case
Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United
States, 2Case
Center for Imaging Research, Case Western Reserve
University
In this study, we developed a novel method for rapid T2
mapping of mouse heart in vivo. Our results demonstrate
that a high temporal resolution of one minute can be
achieved by combining a fast multi-echo spin-echo
sequence with compressed sensing reconstruction.
|
3803. |
15 |
Early signs of
cardiomyopathy in delta-sarcoglycan null mice
Anne-Cecile Huby1, Sumeda Abeykoon2,
Scott Dunn2, and Janaka Wansapura2
1The Heart Institute, Cincinnati Children's
Hospital, Cincinnati, OH, United States, 2Imaging
Research Center, Cincinnati Children's Hospital,
Cincinnati, OH, United States
Delta-sarcoglycan null mice (DSG) develop cardiac and
skeletal muscle histopathological alterations similar to
those in humans with limb girdle muscular dystrophy. In
this study we performed cardiac MRI on 12 week old mice
compared to wild type (WT). There was no difference in
the ejection fraction between DSG and WT. However the
circumferential strain of DSG mice was significantly
less than that of the WT. There was an increase in the
gene expression of collagen markers. No delayed
enhancement was observed but ex vivo T1 and T2 maps
showed decreased relaxation times that correlated with
mild diffused fibrosis in histopathology.
|
3804. |
16 |
Validation of Myocardial
Motion Parameter Extraction from Cine Cardiac MR Against
Tissue Doppler Echocardiography
Christoph Guetter1, Paaladinesh
Thavendiranathan2,3, Marie-Pierre Jolly1,
Xiaoguang Lu1, Hui Xue1, and
Orlando P. Simonetti2
1Siemens Corporate Research, Princeton, New
Jersey, United States, 2The
Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States, 3Cleveland
Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio, United States
The assessment of mitral annular tissue velocity plays
an essential role in the evaluation of diastolic
dysfunction. We have previously shown that mitral
annular velocities can be derived from standard
four-chamber cine SSFP images by automatically detecting
and tracking the mitral valve insertion points. However,
this method has not been validated against Tissue
Doppler echocardiography, the standard clinical method
for evaluating diastolic function. The objective of this
study was to assess the accuracy of early and late
diastolic (e’ and a’) mitral annular velocities derived
from high temporal resolution SSFP cine by correlating
with tissue Doppler echocardiography.
|
3805. |
17 |
Right ventricular strain
imaging with single-acquisition simultaneous 3-D SPAMM
Hazel D Sarah Rovno1, Chun Xu2,
Lawrence Dougherty1, James J Pilla1,2,
Jeremy McGarvey2, Robert C Gorman2,
Joseph H Gorman, III2, Walter R. T. Witschey1,2,
Kevin Koomalsingh2, Gerald A Zsido2,
Norihiro Kondo2, Manabu Takebe2,
Kristen Dillard2, Christina Lau2,
and Harold I Litt1
1Radiology, University of Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 2Surgery,
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United
States
Single-acquisition, simultaneous 3-D SPAMM strain
imaging of the right ventricle permits assessment of
direction and magnitude of regional strains in the right
ventricle, at different levels base to apex, and along
the wall. 4 swine, 2 healthy, 2 post-infarction were
imaged with this sequence. An optical flow method was
used for tag tracking, and principal systolic strain was
calculated from these displacements using a custom
program. Maximal 3-D strain over systole was assessed on
multiple regions of interest in both ventricles. Trends
in strain data were consistent with theoretical
expectations, validating this method.
|
3806. |
18 |
Quantitative Assessment of
Atrioventricular Junction Motion in Patients with
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy-A Cine MRI Study
Sohae Chung1, Shahryar Saba2,
Robert Donnino2, Monvadi B. Srichai1,
Stuart D. Katz2, and Leon Axel1
1Radiology Department, NYU Langone Medical
Center, New York, NY, United States, 2Leon
H. Charney Division of Cardiology, New York University
School of Medicine, New York, NY, United States
Assessment of diastolic function involves consideration
of its dynamics, which are determined by a combination
of pressures and myocardial relaxation. In our previous
study, we demonstrated a method for assessing diastolic
function with MRI in patients with heart failure, using
cine MRI to track the motion of the atrioventricular
junction (AVJ). Since the AVJ is clearly defined in
long-axis cine MRI, its position can be readily tracked,
allowing us to measure its longitudinal motion. In this
work, we measured the AVJ motion in patients with
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a group known to have
altered LV relaxation, to assess their diastolic
function.
|
3807. |
19 |
Imaging intramyocardial
hemorrhage following ischemia-reperfusion injury: A
Translation Study
Avinash Kali1,2, Andreas Kumar3,
Richard Tang2, James Min2, and
Rohan Dharmakumar2,4
1University of California, Los Angeles, CA,
United States, 2Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Laval
University, Laval, QC, Canada, 4Northwestern
University, Chicago, IL, United States
The effectiveness of T2* maps, T2 maps and T2-STIR
images for detecting acute reperfusion myocardial
hemorrhage was evaluated in a surgically controlled
canine model and a pilot patient population. Relative to
remote myocardium, T2* decreased significantly in the
presence of reperfusion hemorrhage, while T2-STIR signal
intensity and T2 remained significantly elevated. T2* of
non-hemorrhagic infarctions was not significantly
different from the remote myocardium. T2-STIR signal
intensity and T2 were significantly higher than those of
both remote and hemorrhagic myocardium. We conclude that
T2* is a more effective approach to detect acute
reperfusion hemorrhage.
|
3808. |
20 |
Carnitine supplementation
in long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase knock-out mice is not
detrimental for cardiac function
Adrianus J. Bakermans1, Michel van Weeghel2,
Klaas Nicolay1, Jeanine J. Prompers1,
and Sander M. Houten2
1Biomedical NMR, Eindhoven University of
Technology, Eindhoven, Netherlands, 2Laboratory
Genetic Metabolic Diseases, Academic Medical Center,
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Elevation of long-chain acylcarnitine levels is a
hallmark of long-chain fatty acid -oxidation
disorders, and is accompanied by low free carnitine
levels. To normalize carnitine concentration, carnitine
supplementation has been proposed. However, this could
provoke lipotoxic accumulation of long-chain
acylcarnitines. Myocardial function, morphology and
triglyceride (TG) levels were quantified using in
vivo MRI
and 1H-MRS
in long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase knock-out (LCAD KO)
and wild-type (WT) control mice on carnitine
supplementation. Carnitine supplementation did not
affect cardiac function, but normalized TG content in
LCAD KO myocardium. No evidence for lipotoxic effects of
supplementation-induced long-chain acylcarnitine
accumulation was found.
|
3809. |
21 |
Quantitative Assessment of
L-type Calcium Channel Activity by Manganese-Enhanced MRI
Kai Jiang1,2, Ya Chen1,2, Raymond
F. Muzic, Jr.1,3, and Xin Yu1,2
1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case
Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, United
States, 2Case
Center for Imaging Research, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, OH, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, OH, United States
A mathematical model was developed for quantitative
assessment of the L-type calcium channel activity with
manganese-enhanced MRI. Dynamic changes in R1 during
manganese perfusion and wash-out were followed with
rapid T1 mapping at 3 min temporal resolution. Manganese
uptake via the L-type calcium channel and efflux via the
NCX were estimated by least-squares fitting of the model
to experimental MEMRI data.
|
3810. |
22 |
Evaluation of Strain and
Torsion in Physiologic and Pathologic Left Ventricular
Hypertrophy
Candida Laura Desjardins1, Yong Chen2,
Julian Stelzer2, Monica Montano2,
Michiko Watanabe1, and Xin Yu2,3
1Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland,
OH, United States, 2Case
Western Reserve University, 3Case
Center for Imaging Research, Cleveland, OH
Cardiac responses to increased workload and
environmental stresses may result in physiologic or
pathologic remodeling of cardiomyocyte size and
vascularization. Distinguishing pathologic from
physiologic hypertrophy at an early stage could be
critical for clinical management of patients. The
discriminating factor between the physiologic and
pathologic models of LVH lies in the timing of strain
development. When faced with LVH in the presence of
preserved function in a young patient, the difference in
timing of strain development may be of clinical utility
to discriminate between a benign athlete’s heart and
HCM.
|
3811. |
23 |
High spatial resolution
functional cardiac MRI in mice using a cryogenic RF probe
Babette Wagenhaus1, Andreas Pohlmann1,
Matthias Alexander Dieringer1,2, and Thoralf
Niendorf1,2
1Berlin Ultrahigh Field Facility, Max
Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin,
Germany, 2Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charité Campus
Buch, Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
Rapid phenotyping, assessment of gender effects and
evaluation of novel therapeutics in longitudinal studies
using high spatial resolution cardiac MRI (CMR) is of
increasing interest for a variety of mouse models of
cardiovascular diseases. SNR constraints can be offset
by use of a cryogenic RF probe. This study examines the
feasibility and potential benefit of high spatial
resolution functional cardiac MRI employing a cryogenic
transceive RF surface coil compared to a conventional
mouse heart receiver array/body resonator combination.
Our results suggest that use of a cryogenic coil could
not only improve the accuracy of left ventricular
function and morphology assessment, but also affords
chamber quantification of the right ventricle.
|
3812. |
24 |
Analysis of left
ventricular functional parameters of the mouse heart during
prolonged hyperthyroidism and recovery
Neele S. Hübner1,2, Annette Merkle1,
Bernd Jung1, Dominik von Elverfeldt1,
and Laura-Adela Harsan1
1Department of Radiology, Medical Physics,
University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 2Faculty
of Biology, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
Thyroid hormones (TH) have various modes of action and
their beneficial effects for treatment of different
diseases are focus of recent studies. One example is
their pro-remyelinating effect in animal models of
multiple sclerosis. However enhanced TH levels result in
undesired side effects like cardiovascular impairment.
Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging is used to
assess left ventricular performance in mice after
prolonged hyperthyroidism and during recovery.
Significant reduction of ejection fraction and global
wall thickening account for a decline in the left
ventricular performance induced by long-term
hyperthyroidism. Recovery of the cardiac function is
seen after periods of TH treatment arrest.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
|
Coronary MRA & Vessel Wall Imaging
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 14:30 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3813. |
25 |
Direct Coronary Artery
Motion Tracking from Cartesian 2D Fat Image Navigator for
Motion Corrected Coronary MRA
Keigo Kawaji1,2, Pascal Spincemaille2,
Thanh D. Nguyen2, Nandadeepa Thimmappa2,
Mitchell A. Cooper1,2, Martin R. Prince2,
and Yi Wang1,2
1Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University,
Ithaca, NY, United States, 2Radiology,
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, United
States
Direct measurement of coronary artery motion can be
determined from a Cartesian 2D fat image navigator,
which uses a spatial-spectral selective excitation to
excite the epicardial fat surrounding the coronary
arteries. In this study, we demonstrate the feasibility
of motion correction on all acquired data in a 3D SSFP
CMRA sequence without respiratory gating using coronary
artery displacements derived from the 2D Fat image
navigator.
|
3814. |
26 |
Cartesian Whole-Heart
Coronary MRA Using Interleaved Auxiliary Image Acquisition
and 3D Affine Motion Correction
Markus Henningsson1, Claudia Prieto1,
and Rene M Botnar1
1Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical
Engineering, King's College London, London, United
Kingdom
We developed a novel respiratory motion correction
technique for Cartesian whole-heart coronary MRA (CMRA)
using 3D affine transformation which allows for data
acquisition with 100% efficiency. Fully sampled, low
resolution auxiliary images are acquired for different
respiratory bins, interleaved with high resolution CMRA
images. Correction is performed in image space by
registering each auxiliary image (bin 2-4) to the
end-expiratory image (bin1), thereafter applying the
calculated transformation to the corresponding CMRA
images which have been similarly binned. The proposed
method, with 100% gating efficiency, shows comparable
image quality to a 7mm gated scan with 1D FH correction
(average gating efficiency=55%).
|
3815. |
27 |
Whole-heart Coronary MR
Angiography with 2D Parallel Imaging: Comparison of Two
Cartesian Sampling Schemes with and without CAIPIRINHA
Reordering
Xiaoming Bi1, Randall Kroeker2,
Johannes Breuer3, Sven Zuehlsdorff1,
and Peter Kellman4
1Siemens Healthcare, Chicago, IL, United
States, 2Siemens
Healthcare, Winnipeg, Canada, 3Siemens
AG Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany, 4National
Institute of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States
The goal of this work was to: 1) investigate the
feasibility of whole-heart coronary MRA in consecutive
volunteers using 2D CAIPIRINHA sampling strategy; 2)
compare the efficacy of 2D CAIPIRINHA to conventional
reordering with total acceleration of 8 (PE x PA = 4 x
2) and matched protocol. Preliminary results from five
consecutive volunteer studies showed improved parallel
imaging g-factor with CAIPIRINHA reordering as compared
to conventional reordering (CAIPIRINHA: 1.52 ± 0.05;
Conventional: 1.85 ± 0.17, p = 0.038).
|
3816. |
28 |
Self-Gate Free-Breathing
Coronary Artery Vessel Wall Imaging by Combining Water and
Fat Images
Jing Liu1, Thanh D Nguyen2, David
Saloner1, and Yi Wang2
1University of California San Francisco, San
Francisco, CA, United States, 2Weill
Cornell Medical College, New York, NY, United States
In this abstract, we proposed a novel technique for
imaging coronary vessel wall. A self-gated
free-breathing multi-echo radial imaging technique was
used to generate 3D coronary cine images. No external
respiratory, cardiac gating or dedicated preparation
pulses were required. Simultaneous water and fat
visualization was achieved, and the combination of the
two images has been demonstrated to not only improve the
coronary artery contrast but provide depiction of the
coronary artery vessel wall.
|
3817. |
29 |
Black-blood Steady State
Free Precession (SSFP) coronary wall MRI for cardiac
allografts: A feasibility study
Kai Lin1, Xiaoming Bi2, Ying Liu1,
Kirsi Taimen1, Biao Lu1, Debiao Li1,
and James C Carr1
1Radiology, Northwestern University, Chicago,
Illinois, United States, 2Siemens
Healthcare, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Black-blood SSFP coronary wall MRI provides higher image
quality, SNR and CNR than traditional TSE does in HTx
recipients. It has the potential to become an
alternative means to noninvasive imaging of cardiac
allografts.
|
3818. |
30 |
ADC mapping for carotid
plaque characterisation
Victoria Young1, Andrew J Patterson2,
Umar Sadat3, Andrew N Priest2,
Robert van de Geest4, Martin J Graves1,2,
and Jonathan H Gillard1
1Radiology, Addenbrooke's Hospital,
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 2Medical
Physics and Engineering, Addenbrooke's Hopsital,
Cambridge, United Kingdom, 3Vascular
Surgery, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge,
Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom, 4Radiology,
Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, Netherlands
High resolution MRI is an option in the assessment of
carotid atherosclerosis but there are limitations of
unenhanced imaging in complex plaque and evaluation is
subjective. DWI through ADC mapping has been applied
both in vivo and ex vivo to quantitatively differentiate
lipid core and fibrous tissue. This study evaluated a
larger patient population to demonstate this separation
could still be seen in a broad range of stenoses and to
show plaque thrombus also demonstrated a different ADC
value which varied with thrombus age. This evidence
increases the value of ADC mappingin demonstrating
vulnerable plaque characteristics.
|
3819.
|
31 |
Detection of vascular
remodeling using an elastin contrast agent in a rabbit model
of atherosclerosis
Alkystis Phinikaridou1, Marcelo E Andia2,
Andreas Indermuehle2, David C Onthank3,
Rick R Cesati3, Simon P Robinson3,
Prakash Saha2, and Rene M Botnar2
1Imaging Sciences, King's College London,
London, United Kingdom, 2King's
College London, 3Lantheus
Medical Imaging
The extracellular matrix protein (ECM) elastin
contributes to 30% of the dry weight of the vascular
wall. Studies have shown that dysregulation of the
balance between elastogenesis and elastolysis leads to
the de novo accumulation of elastin fibers in the
pathologically altered vessel wall and accompanies the
development of atherosclerosis and may contribute to
plaque instability. In this study, we employed in vivo
MRI in a rabbit model of atherosclerosis and controlled
plaque disruption to investigate the merits of an
elastin-targeted gadolinium-based contrast agent for the
detection of vessel wall remodeling and its association
with plaque vulnerability.
|
3820. |
32 |
Value of improved motion
sensitized driven equilibrium(iMSDE) sequence in
preoperative evaluation for carotid endarterectomy and
carotid artery stenting in cases of atherosclerosis:
compared with digital subtraction angiography
Huilin Zhao1, Xihai Zhao2, Jinnan
Wang3,4, Niranjan Balu4, Ye Cao1,
Xiaosheng Liu1, Xiangyang Ma5,
Chun Yuan4, and Jianrong Xu1
1Radiology, Renji hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong
Univesity, Shanghai, China, 2Center
for Biomedical Imaging Research, Tsinghua University
School of Medicine, Beijing, China, 3Philips
Research North America, Briarcliff Manor, NY, United
States, 4Radiology,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States, 5Philips
Research Asia, Shanghai, China
The iMSDE sequence provides outstanding blood
suppression efficiency and time efficiency. Thus, this
new pulse sequence has the potential to become a
noninvasive alternative to DSA for quantitative carotid
vascular morphology evaluation. This study sought to
evaluate the clinical value of the iMSDE techniques in
atherosclerotic carotid artery assessment in 29 subjects
before carotid endarterectomy (CEA) and carotid artery
stenting(CAS), by comparing with DSA. It was found that
the iMSDE sequence demonstrated a good consistency with
DSA in defining the location and shape of the advanced
plaques. Additionally, the iMSDE sequence has the
advantage of accurately depicting early atherosclerotic
lesions, which can be beneficial for clinical treatment
planning.
|
3821. |
33 |
Gadofosveset monitors the
effects of different interventions on endothelial
permeability and plaque progression
Alkystis Phinikaridou1, Marcelo E Andia2,
and Rene M Botnar2
1Imaging Sciences, King's College London,
London, United Kingdom, 2King's
College London
Studies have demonstrated that endothelial dysfunction
precedes and promotes atherosclerosis development
because of increased endothelial permeability,
circulating lipoproteins, inflammatory cells and
molecules. We have previously shown that contrast
enhanced MRI using gadofosveset, an albumin binding
gadolinium contrast agent, can detect endothelial damage
associated with atherosclerotic plaque formation and
progression in high-fat fed apoE -/- mice. In this
study, we explored whether imaging with gadofosveset
could be used to monitor the effects of different
interventions on endothelial permeability and plaque
progression.
|
3822. |
34 |
Time-Resolved
Contrast-Enhanced Black-Blood Carotid Vessel Wall Imaging
with SRDIR
Zhaoyang Fan1,2, Jingsi Xie1,3,
Xiaoming Bi4, James Carr3, Troy
Labounty1, James Min1, Daniel
Berman1, and Debiao Li1,2
1Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles,
CA, United States, 2University
of California, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 3Northwestern
University, Chicago, IL, United States, 4Siemens
Cardiovascular R&D, Chicago, IL, United States
Inflammation plays a critical role in various stages of
the atherosclerotic plaque development. Dynamic
contrast-enhanced vessel wall imaging has been used to
link the enhancement pattern to the extent of
inflammation of carotid plaque. However, the previous
work used a bright blood technique, making it difficult
to clearly draw the contour of the vessel wall. In this
work, we developed a T1-insensitve 2D black blood
imaging technique, SRDIR-prepared gradient-echo, to
acquire time-resolved contrast-enhanced vessel wall
images which is interleaved by a bright-blood
acquisition. Separate signal measurements of blood and
vessel wall allowed accurate determination of Ktrans and
fractional plasma volume.
|
3823. |
35 |
Optimisation of the
Measurement of the Arterial Input Function During High-Dose
Administration for Dual Imaging Dynamic Contrast Enhanced (DCE)
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Applications in the Human
Carotid Arteries
Philip M Robson1, Claudia Calcagno1,
Sarayu Ramachandran1, Venkatesh Mani1,
Melanie Kotys-Traughber2, and Zahi A Fayad1
1Translational and Molecular Imaging
Institute, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY,
United States, 2Philips
Healthcare, Cleveland, OH, United States
Investigation of simultaneous imaging of the arterial
input function and the vessel wall response in
quantitative DCE of the carotid arteries in
atherosclerosis requires acquisition of signal in the
presence of highly concentrated contrast agent in the
first-pass of the bolus. We employ a saturation-prepared
segmented GRE acquisition and a signal model that
accounts for inflow and non-steady-state conditions
during acquisition. This strategy is assessed
quantitatively in three subjects using the
Stewart-Hamilton dilution principle, showing no
significant difference (p=0.52) between the integral of
the first pass of the concentration-time curve and the
ratio of known dose and measured cardiac output.
|
3824. |
36 |
Comparison of DANTE
Prepared Black Blood (BB) -TSE with Conventional BB Methods
Linqing Li1, and Peter Jezzard1
1FMRIB, Clinical Neurology Department,
University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom
We have previously demonstrated that the DANTE (a rapid
series of low flip angle RF pulses interspersed with
gradients) preparation is a very promising black blood
technique. In this work, a comprehensive comparison of
T1, T2 weighted and proton density imaging was
performed. In addition, further application to a
DANTE-prepared multi-slab 3D GRASE sequence was
investigated. The improvement of the DANTE method over
the existing methods is considerable in T1, T2 and Pd
weighted 2D imaging. DANTE may be adapted as a BB module
for 3D BB acquisition.
|
3825. |
37 |
Atherosclerotic Plaque
Imaging with Integrated PET/MR: Preliminary Results in a
Rabbit Model
Isabel Dregely1, Christine Baumgartner2,
Eliane Weidl1, Stephan G Nekolla1,
Carl Ganter3, Jaroslav Pelisek4,
Markus Schwaiger1, and Iina Laitinen1
1Department of Nuclear Medicine, Klinikum
rechts der Isar der TU München, Munich, Bavaria,
Germany, 2Centre
of Preclinical Research, Klinikum rechts der Isar der TU
München, Munich, Bavaria, Germany, 3Department
of Radiology, Klinikum rechts der Isar der TU München,
Munich, Bavaria, Germany, 4Clinic
for Vascular Surgery, Klinikum rechts der Isar der TU
München, Munich, Bavaria, Germany
In atherosclerosis characterization of the so-called
“vulnerable” plaque, which is at risk for disruption, is
critical to predict acute adverse events. In this study
we demonstrate the ability to identify complex,
vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques in a rabbit model of
carotid artery atherosclerosis combining morphological
and functional information in simultaneous PET/MR
imaging.
|
3826. |
38 |
Prospective Multicenter
Cohort Study of High Resolution MRI in Giant Cell Arteritis:
initial results
Thorsten Alexander Bley1, Julia Geiger2,
Markus Both3, Thomas Ness2, Peter
Vaith2, Michael Markl4, Bernhard
Nölle3, and Thorsten Klink5
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology,
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Hamburg, Germany, 2University
Hospital Freiburg,3University Hospital Kiel, 4Northwestern
University, 5University
Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
Giant cell arteritis (GCA) is a diagnostic challenge.
Single center studies have demonstrates the value of
high resolution MRI to visualize mural inflammatory
changes in GCA. This multicenter cohort study compares
high resolution MRI with the diagnostic gold standard
temporal artery biopsy in a rather large cohort of GCA
patients form 3 academic medical centers. Two blinded
reader achieved high sensitivities (95% and 89%) and
specificities (73% and 80%) in detection of mural
inflammatory changes in GCA with substantial
inter-observer-agreement (kappa = 0.657).
|
3827. |
39 |
Compressed sensing (CS)
for dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI of atherosclerosis:
preliminary experience in a rabbit model of disease
Claudia Calcagno1, Hadrien Dyvorne1,
Ricardo Otazo2, Philip M Robson1,
Mark E Lobatto1, Sarayu Ramachandran1,
Venkatesh Mani1, and Zahi A Fayad1
1Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York,
NY, United States, 2New
York University, New York, NY, United States
Dynamic contrast enhanced (DCE) MRI of atherosclerosis
is gaining increasing interest for the characterization
of vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques. In this study we
present our preliminary experience in applying
compressed sensing reconstruction to DCE-MRI of
atherosclerosis, with the aim of accelerating tissue
acquisition to achive higher in-plane spatial resolution
and tissue coverage.
|
3828. |
40 |
A New Approach for
Noncontrast MR Imaging of Carotid Artery Disease
Na Zhang1,2, Anqi Pei3, Lei Zhang1,2,
Xiaoxin Tong3, Xin Liu1,2, and Yiu-Cho
Chung1,2
1Paul C. Lauterbur Research Centre for
Biomedical Imaging, Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced
Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong, China, 2Key
Laboratory of Health Informatics, Chinese Academy of
Sciences, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China, 3Department
of Neurology, Peking University Shenzhen Hospital,
Shenzhen, Guangdong, China
Carotid plaque imaging by MRI can characterize plaque
components and allow assessment of plaque vulnerability.
However, current technique requires Gd-based contrast
and long examination time, making it inferior to color
Doppler. We propose here a multi-contrast three
dimensional (3D) carotid vessel wall imaging protocol
without the use of Gd-based contrast. The protocol,
consisting of T1w-SPACE, T2w-SPACE and MPRAGE, can be
finished within 20 minutes including localization.
Preliminary evaluation on volunteers and patients showed
that total examination time was about 13 minutes
excluding patient setup. The approach reduces operator
dependency, provides more diagnostic information and
better coverage compared to color Doppler.
|
3829. |
41 |
MRI of carotid
atherosclerosis to identify TIA and stroke patients who are
at risk of a recurrence
Robert Kwee1, Robert van Oostenbrugge2,
Werner Mess2, Rob van der Geest3,
Jos van Engelshoven2, Joachim Wildberger2,
and Eline Kooi2
1Maastricht University Medical Center,
Maastricht, Limburg, Netherlands, 2Maastricht
University Medical Center, Netherlands, 3Leiden
University Medical Center, Netherlands
The results of the present study indicate that the
presence of a LRNC, a thin and/or ruptured FC, and IPH
are associated with the recurrence of clinical
cerebrovascular ischemic events. Our study confirms
findings of previous studies and shows that assessment
of carotid plaque characteristics by MRI may help
improving patient selection for carotid endarterectomy.
|
3830. |
42 |
Ruptured Carotid Plaques
as a Feature in Patients with Acute Lower Limb Arterial
Thrombosis
Qingjun Wang1, Yong Guo2, Jianming
Cai3, and Minghua Huang4
1Department of Radiology, Chinese Navy
General Hospital, Beijing, Beijing, China, 2Department
of Radiology, Chinese Navy General Hospital, China,3Chinese
PLA General Hospital, 4Chinese
Navy General Hospital
By using multi-contrast high-resolution MRI, we
prospectively studied whether carotid plaque
characteristics can predict acute lower limb arterial
thrombosis (ALLAT). In the present study, each carotid
atherosclerotic patient with and without ALLAT underwent
a carotid MRI examination on a 3.0-T MRI scanner. Our
findings showed that the presence of fibrous cap rupture
was the strongest independent predictor for ALLAT.
|
3831. |
43 |
A Motion Monitorred SPACE
Sequence for Isotropic Cardotid Wall Imaging
Qiong Zhang1, Cong Zhao1, and Jing
An1
1Siemens ShenZhen Magnetic Resonance,
ShenZhen, GuangDong, China
In this work, a self-navigated 3D measurement paradigm
is proposed and tested with a three-dimensional turbo
spin-echo (SPACE) sequence. Compared with conventional
cross-paired navigator [4], sequence of this work
requires no navigation bar, skips the manual positioning
and leaves no dark-band on final image. With volunteer
test, this work makes motion blurring reduced and
definition of vessel wall increased.
|
3832. |
44 |
Non-invasive visualization
of basilar artery wall and branches ostium with
high-resolution 3D black blood sequence at 3.0T
Xin Lou1, Ning Ma2, and Hao Shen3
1Department of Radiology, Chinese PLA General
Hospital, Beijing, China, 2Department
of Neurology, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Beijing, China, 3GE
healthcare, Beijing, China
3D fast magnetic resonance black blood sequence
flow-dephasing-prepared spoiled gradient recalled echo
was performed to screen basilar artery wall and the
ostia of the adjacent branch arteries. Our data suggest
that the sequence can be used for high-resolution and
large coverage of the basilar artery wall and the ostia
of branches including superior cerebral artery, anterior
inferior cerebral artery, and posterior inferior
cerebral artery.
|
3833. |
45 |
Contrast-Enhanced 3D Brain
Black-Blood Imaging for Detection of Intracranial Arterial
Unstable Plaque in Acute Ischemic Stroke Patients
Chul-Ho Sohn1, JiHoon Kim2,
Jaeseok Park3, Kee-Hyun Chang2,
Seunghong Choi2, and InSeong Kim4
1Radiology, Seoul National University
Hospital, Seoul, Korea, 2Seoul
National University Hospital, Korea, 3Korea
University, Korea, 4Siemens
Healthcare, Seoul, Korea
Contrast-enhanced 3D fast spin echo black-blood images
at the 3 T may be able to differentiate enhancement
patterns of intracranial atherosclerotic plaques
(eccentric), especially in the non-significant
intracranial artery stenosis patients. High-resolution
3D black-blood images could help precise stroke
subtyping.
|
3834. |
46 |
High Spatial Resolution MR
Imaging of the Carotid Arteries at 7.0 T Using an 8 Channel
Transceiver Coil Array
Abdullah Ok1, Jan Rieger1,2,
Andreas Gräßl1, Vince Istvan Madai3,4,
Jan Sobesky3,4, and Thoralf Niendorf1,5
1Berlin Ultrahigh Field Facility (B.U.F.F.),
Max-Delbrück-Center for Molecular Medicine, Berlin,
Germany, 2MRI.TOOLS
GmbH, Berlin, Germany, 3Center
for Stroke Research Berlin (CSB), Charite
Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany, 4Department
of Neurology, Charite Universitätsmedizin, Berlin,
Germany, 5Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charité Campus Buch,
Berlin, Germany
A dedicated 8 channel transmit/receive coil was
proposed, simulated and designed to address the
challenges of carotid MRI at 7 T. The coil was tested on
volunteers and found to meet the needs of isotropic,
sub-millimeter in-plane spatial resolution imaging of
the carotid arteries.
|
3835. |
47 |
Detection of Carotid
Intraplaque Hemorrhage by In Vivo Black Blood Imaging Using
Spatial Labeling with Multiple Inversion Pulses Prepared
Spoiled Gradient Recalled Sequence
Qingjun Wang1, Yong Guo2, Jianming
Cai3, and Minghua Huang4
1Department of Radiology, Chinese Navy
General Hospital, Beijing, Beijing, China, 2Department
of Radiology, Chinese Navy General Hospital, China,3Chinese
PLA General Hospital, 4Chinese
Navy General Hospital
Black blood imaging based on Spatial LabEling with
multiple invErsion pulses prepared SPoiled Gradient
Recalled sequence (SLEEK-SPGR) is thought to be a
potentially promising tool in imaging carotid IPH.
However, so far no study has evaluated its accuracy in
diagnosis of IPH by histological assessment. In this
study, with the help of excised specimens from carotid
endarterectomy (CEA), we evaluated the sensitivity and
efficacy of SLEEK-SPGR in detecting carotid IPH. Our
findings showed SLEEK-SPGR has very high sensitivity and
specificity in detecting carotid IPH, and can provide a
better visualization of carotid IPH than traditional
3D-TOF and QIR images.
|
3836. |
48 |
Clot Lysis Dynamics in an
Experimental Rat Venous Thrombosis Model During 4 Weeks of
Fibrinolytic Inhibition
Abdel Wahad Bidar1, Anna Ravnefjord2,
Frank Risse1, Edvin Johansson1,
Margareta Elg2, and Paul Hockings1
1R&D PHB, Imaging, AstraZeneca, Mölndal,
Sweden, 2CVGI,
Bioscience, AstraZeneca, Mölndal, Sweden
Understanding the dynamic process following clot
formation and lysis in relevant animal models is of
interest in order to understand the mechanism underlying
human disease and to develop therapeutic approaches. The
results demonstrate for the first time by means of MRI
the dynamics of clot lysis in vivo in a rat model of
venous thrombosis in the presence of an antifibrinolytic
agent. Delayed thrombus lysis rate was measured in
treated animals compared to controls. This model could
be useful for translation between in vitro and in vivo
results and for bridging to clinical results when
evaluating thrombolytic and fibrinolytic agents.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
|
Cardiovascular Technology, Image Processing, Other
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
14:30 - 15:30 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3837. |
25 |
Highly-accelerated, single
breath-hold 3D Cine b-SSFP MRI with a combination of
compressed sensing and parallel imaging
Daniel Kim1, Alexis Harrison2,
Wilson King3, Li Feng4, Elwin
Bassett5, Christopher J McGann2,
Nassir F Marrouche2, and Ricardo Otazo6
1Radiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, Utah, United States, 2Internal
Medicine, University of Utah, 3Division
of Pediatric Cardiology, University of Utah, 4Sackler
Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, New York
University, 5Physics,
University of Utah, 6Radiology,
New York University
Breath-hold cine b-SSFP MRI is the gold standard for
imaging myocardial function. The need for multiple
breath-holds, however, increases the examination time
and likelihood for patient exhaustion from repeated
breath-holds. We sought to develop a single breath-hold
3D b-SSFP cine MRI pulse sequence with 12-fold
acceleration using a standard coil array, by employing a
combination of compressed sensing and parallel imaging
that exploits joint sparsity among all coil datasets,
and compare its performance against multi-slice 2D b-SSFP
cine MRI for LV function quantification. All four global
function measurements (EDV,ESV,SV,EF) were in good
agreement, with coefficient of variation ranging from
6-12%.
|
3838. |
26 |
3D Cardiac CINE Imaging
using 3D Through-Time Radial GRAPPA
Nicole Seiberlich1, Katherine L Wright1,
Philipp Ehses2,3, Vikas Gulani1,4,
and Mark A Griswold1,4
1Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, OH, United States, 2Max
Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen,
Germany, 3Neuroimaging,
University Hospital Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany, 4Radiology,
University Hospitals of Cleveland, Cleveland, OH, United
States
Performing 3D cardiac CINE imaging in a single
breathhold is challenging due to the long acquisition
times required to collect the necessary data. By
employing 3D through-time radial GRAPPA, a method
similar to the 2D radial GRAPPA method introduced for
real-time cardiac imaging, highly accelerated 3D CINE
stack-of-stars radial data can be reconstructed. This
abstract demonstrates that by using 3D through-time
radial GRAPPA, data for 3D cardiac CINE images that
cover the entire heart can acquired within a 15 second
breathhold with a temporal resolution of 45 ms per 3D
volume and a spatial resolution of 2.3x2.3x6 mm3.
|
3839. |
27 |
Different patterns of
myocardial iron overload by T2* Cardiovascular MR as markers
of risk for cardiac complication in thalassemia major.
Antonella Meloni1, Vincenzo Positano1,
Petra Keilberg1, Brunella Favilli1,
Cristina Salvatori2, Letizia Gulino1,
Gennaro Restaino3, Gianluca Valeri4,
Massimo Midiri5, Angelo Zuccarelli6,
Massimo Lombardi1, and Alessia Pepe1
1Cardiovascular MR Unit, Fondazione G.
Monasterio CNR-Regione Toscana and Institute of Clinical
Physiology, Pisa, Italy, 2Fondazione
G. Monasterio CNR-Regione Toscana, Pisa, Italy, 3Centro
di Ricerca e Formazione ad Alta Tecnologia nelle Scienze
Biomediche "Giovanni Paolo II", Università Cattolica del
Sacro Cuore, Campobasso, Italy, 4Dipartimento
di Radiologia, Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria
Ospedali Riuniti "Umberto I-Lancisi-Salesi", Ancona,
Italy,5Istituto di Radiologia, Policlinico
"Paolo Giaccone", Palermo, Italy, 6Centro
trasfusionale e di microcitemia, Ospedale civile, Olbia,
Italy
Homogeneous myocardial iron overload detected by
multislice multiecho T2* MRI technique predicts a
significantly higher risk to develop cardiac
complications, especially heart failure, suggesting an
intensive chelation therapy in this group of thalassemia
major patients.
|
3840. |
28 |
Cardiac Triggered B1+ mapping
using Bloch Siegert in the heart at 3T
Davide Santoro1, Federico von
Samson-Himmelstjerna1,2, Flavio Carinci1,3,
Fabian Hezel1, Matthias Dieringer4,5,
and Thoralf Niendorf1,5
1Berlin Ultra-High Field Facility (BUFF), Max
Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC), Berlin,
Germany, 2Center
for Stroke Research, Charite Universitätsmedizin Berlin,
Berlin, Germany, 3Research
Center Magnetic Resonance Bavaria (M.R.B), Wuerzburg,
Germany, 4Charite
Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 5Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charite Campus Buch,
Berlin, Germany
There is a growing number of Cardiac MR applications
which could benefit of the signal to noise ratio
advantage at high magnetic fields. However the image
quality in CMR may be spoiled by effects other than SNR.
B1+ inhomogeneities present at high field strengths
might affect quantitative CMR studies which require
knowledge of the local applied flip angle. The
acquisition of a FA map with standard methods in the
heart is challenging for the varying heart rates and
repetition times in cardiac gated imaging. This study
examines the feasibility of cardiac gated 2D Bloch
Siegert B1 mapping with the goal to acquire a B1+ maps
of the heart at 3T in a single breath-hold. Our
preliminary results do not show major changes in the
calculated flip angle at the blood/myocardium interface
and hence indicate that blood flow related phase
contributions might be minor.
|
3841. |
29 |
A Two-Chamber Multi-modal
(MR/Ultrasound) Cardiac Phantom for Normal and Pathologic
Hearts
Vahid Tavakoli1,2, Michael Kendrick2,
Motaz Alshaher2,3, and Amir A Amini1
1Electrical and Computer Engineering,
University of Louisville, Louisville, ky, United States, 2Veteran's
Affairs Medical Center, Louisville, ky, United States,3Department
of Cardiology, University of Louisville, Louisville, ky,
United States
A non-ferromagnetic, multimodal two chamber moving heart
phantom with applications to cardiac MR,
echocardiography and Doppler imaging is presented. A
biventricular structure is able to simulate the
asymmetric LV motion and inter-ventricular
displacements. A 10% solution of Poly Vinyl alcohol
(PVA) was used as the main material. Freeze-thaw cycles
were used to produce different elasticity, ultrasound
attenuation and T1/T2 properties. An additional
pathologic heart was made to model aneurysm. Three
infarct mimicking inclusions of different elastic
properties were added to simulate infarcted regions.
Image series were acquired with Philips iE33
echocadriography workstation and 1.5 T Philips Achieva
scanner.
|
3842. |
30 |
3D Cine MRI of Mouse Heart
with Concurrent Dephasing and Excitation
Naoharu Kobayashi1, Qiang Xiong2,
Joseph Ippolito2, Jianyi Zhang2,
and Michael Garwood1
1Center for Magnetic Resonance Research,
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United
States, 2Cardiology,
University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis,
Minnesota, United States
3D magnetic resonance cine imaging of the mouse heart is
highly challenging due to limited spatial and temporal
resolution and cardiac and respiratory motion. We
demonstrate CODE 3D cine MRI of mouse heart with
prospective electrocardiogram gating, where the matrix
size was cut down to reduce TR while keeping preferable
spatial resolution by using a small surface coil and
oversampled acquisition. And we applied sliding window
reconstruction in order to increase the nominal temporal
frame rate of the cine images. This method enabled high
resolution 3D cine imaging with ~23 min at 9.4T.
|
3843. |
31 |
Dual breath-hold 3D whole
heart cine cardiac MRI: feasibility and initial experience
Marijn van Stralen1, Jesse Habets2,
Mieke M.P. Driessen3,4, Hamza El Aïdi2,3,
Josien P.W. Pluim1, and Tim Leiner2
1Image Sciences Institute, University Medical
Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 2Radiology,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands, 3Cardiology,
University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Utrecht,
Netherlands, 4The
interuniversity cardiology institute of the Netherlands,
Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands
We demonstrate the feasibility of dual breath-hold whole
heart 3D cine bSSFP cardiac MR with retrospective
reconstruction of any desired viewing plane. The
proposed method allowed fast and accurate assessment of
global LV functional parameters in comparison with
standard 2D bSSFP cine imaging acquired in dedicated
predefined cardiac axis orientations. This method saves
costly scan time by eliminating planning and reducing
acquisition time and may be of value in subjects that
are unable to undergo a complete cardiac evaluation with
conventional 2D cine bSSFP methods.
|
3844. |
32 |
Free-Breathing
Quantitative T2-mapping of the Heart Designed for
Longitudinal Studies at 3T
Ruud B van Heeswijk1,2, Hélène Feliciano1,2,
Gabriele Bonanno1,2, Simone Coppo1,2,
Nathalie Lauriers3, Didier Locca3,
Juerg Schwitter3, and Matthias Stuber1,2
1Department of Radiology, University Hospital
(CHUV) and University of Lausanne (UNIL), Lausanne,
Switzerland, 2Center
for Biomedical Imaging (CIBM), Lausanne, Switzerland, 3Center
for Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Cardiology Service,
University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV), Lausanne,
Switzerland
A novel navigator-gated and -corrected free-breathing
cardiac T2-mapping methodology for
longitudinal studies at 3T was developed and optimized
using numerical simulations and phantom studies. A
reference phantom with a known T2 is
placed in the field-of-view while the T2 fitting
procedure was optimized empirically for improved
accuracy and reproducibility of the T2 measurements.
The performance of this methodology was ascertained
quantitatively in healthy adult human volunteers before
a small cohort of myocardial infarction patients was
investigated.
|
3845. |
33 |
Active Frequency
Stabilisation for Prolonged bSSFP Imaging: Application to
Neonatal Cardiac MRI
Anthony N Price1, Shaihan J Malik1,
Kathryn M Broadhouse1, Anna Finnemore1,
Giuliana Durighel1, David J Cox1,
David Edwards1, Alan M Groves1,
and Jo V Hajnal1
1Robert Steiner MRI Unit, Imaging Sciences
Department, MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Hammersmith
Hospital, Imperial College London, London, United
Kingdom
Balanced-SSFP has become a key tool for assessing
cardiac function. However, the characteristic dark bands
are a major problem, especially in the blood-pool.
Reliable and accurate shimming is essential: as is
optimum and stable frequency selection. In adult CMR,
these issues are rarely a prohibitive problem. In
neonatal CMR increased resolution demands, faster heart
rates, low SNR, and the need to allow free-breathing,
lead to longer acquisition times. Consequently, scanner
frequency can no longer be assumed stable. Here we
present methods for reliable B0 shimming and also active
stabilisation of the scanner frequency drift during
bSSFP scanning in neonatal CMR.
|
3846. |
34 |
Self Consistent Parallel
Imaging with Temporal Sensitivity Estimation (TSPIRIT):
Application to improve Real-time Exercise Stress Cardiac
Cine and Perfusion Imaging
Hui Xue1, Yu Ding2, Ti-Chiun Chang1,
Christoph Guetter1, Subha V. Raman2,
Marie-Pierre Jolly1, and Orlando P. Simonetti2
1Siemens Corporate Research, Princeton, New
Jersey, United States, 2Dorothy
M. Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute, The Ohio
State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States
To improve the image quality of real-time exercise
stress cardiac cine and perfusion imaging, we extended
the recently proposed SPIRIT image reconstruction by
incorporating temporal coil sensitivity estimation on
GRAPPA reconstructed kspace and spatial regularization.
The proposed method was applied to 17 volunteers for
cine imaging with an averaged SNR gain of 28.5% and 10
volunteers for perfusion with a 19.7% SNR gain. The
level of ghosting artifacts was statistically unchanged
while the SNR increase was significant.
|
3847. |
35 |
Accelerated mouse cardiac
imaging using threefold undersampling and kt-BLAST
reconstruction
Ian Marshall1,2, Maurits A Jansen1,2,
Yuehui Tao1,3, Gavin D Merrifield1,4,
and Gillian A Gray2
1Medical Physics, University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 2Centre
for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 3Brain
Research Imaging Centre, University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 4SINAPSE
consortium, www.sinapse.ac.uk, United Kingdom
Conventional “cine” cardiac scans were compared with
threefold undersampled kt-BLAST acquisition in 6 healthy
mice and one with myocardial infarct. Cardiological
indices determined from the kt-BLAST acquisition agreed
well with those from the standard cine sequence.
End-diastolic LV volume was underestimated by 5%,
end-systolic volume overestimated by 5% and ejection
fraction underestimated by 4%. These differences are
within the intra- and inter-observer variation expected
in cardiac studies of mice. We conclude that accelerated
mouse cardiac imaging is possible with acceptable
accuracy for an acceleration factor of 3 times. The
subsequent reduction in exposure to anaesthesia will
contribute to animal welfare.
|
3848. |
36 |
Respiration-Resolved
Ventricular Function Evaluation Using a 5D Cardiac MRI
Technique
Holden H Wu1,2, Dwight G Nishimura2,
Michael V McConnell1,2, and Bob S Hu2,3
1Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford
University, Stanford, CA, United States, 2Electrical
Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United
States, 3Palo
Alto Medical Foundation, Palo Alto, CA, United States
Conventional MRI methods for evaluating cardiac function
seek to suspend or counteract respiratory motion to
avoid artifacts. However, in many disease states,
including pericardial constriction and heart failure
with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), it is
precisely the changes in cardiac function associated
with changes in respiration-induced intra-thoracic
pressure that can reflect the pathophysiology. In this
work, we employ a respiration-resolved 5D cardiac MRI
technique in combination with controllable modulation of
the intra-thoracic pressure to provide a more
comprehensive assessment of ventricular function.
|
3849. |
37 |
Cardiac function
assessment without ECG using image-based navigation
Christoph Kolbitsch1, Daniel Giese1,
Jouke Smink2, Claudia Prieto1, and
Tobias Schaeffter1
1Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical
Engineering, King's College London, London, United
Kingdom, 2Philips
Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
Retrospectively cardiac-gated cine imaging is commonly
used to analyse cardiac function. Self-navigation
techniques exploiting signal amplitude changes due to
blood flow in the acquired data avoid external ECGs.
Nevertheless, they require detectable signals correlated
to blood flow in each slice and synchronisation between
different slices cannot be guaranteed. Here we propose
to overcome this limitation by obtaining a navigator
from 2D real-time images using a simultaneously excited
second navigator slice. This yielded a cardiac gating
signal used to resort data for cine imaging with an
accuracy of 16ms compared to an external ECG and a
variation of 8ms between slices.
|
3850. |
38 |
Linking Myocardial
Function and Structure through Tagged MRI and Diffusion
Tensor Imaging
Carla S Gil1, Stephen D Meredith1,
Adrianus J Bakermans2, Baastian J Nierop2,
Gustav J Strijkers2, Hans C van Assen3,
Niall C Colgan4, and Kathleen M Curran1
1School of Medicine & Medical Science,
University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland, 2Biomedical
NMR, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Eindhoven
University of Technology, Eindhoven, Netherlands, 3Biomedical
Image Analysis, Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven,
Netherlands, 4College
of Medicine, Swansea University, Wales, United Kingdom
The aim of this study is to link cardiac functional and
structural properties. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is
the best method to study myocardial fiber architecture,
while tagged MRI is the best tool to measure local
deformation of the myocardium. Here, we report for the
first time, a preliminary study that aims at combining
information of the myocardial fiber structure and its
mechanical properties, such as circumferential, radial,
shear and principal strains. Our analysis shows a
correlation between left ventricular deformation and
fiber architecture for normal datasets.
|
3851. |
39 |
Cardiac Motion-Corrected
Inversion Prepared Real-Time (“TIRT”) Cine TrueFISP Imaging
for Rapid Myocardial T1 Estimation
Andreas Greiser1, Hui Xue2, Peter
Schmitt1, Matthias Dieringer3,4,
Florian von Knobelsdorff-Brenkhoff3,4,
Thoralf Niendorf3,4, Jeanette Schulz-Menger3,4,
and Edgar Mueller1
1Siemens AG, Healthcare Sector, Erlangen,
Germany, 2Siemens
Corporate Research, Princeton, New Jersey, United
States, 3Berlin
Ultrahigh Field Facility, Max-Delbrueck Center for
Molecular Medicine, Berlin, Germany, 4Experimental
and Clinical Research Center (ECRC), Charité Campus Buch,
Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany
T1 mapping is promising for quantifying myocardial
integrity. We propose a new method to rapidly (in 5 sec)
map T1 in the heart based on an IR-prepared real-time
Cine TrueFISP sequence combined with an elaborate motion
correction. The method was validated against the
established MOLLI technique in T1 phantom measurements
as well as in vivo (n=10) and one myocardial infarction
patient. Phantom results showed good match between
methods. In vivo at 3T TIRT overestimated T1 by 12.9%
pre and 17.7% post contrast, but with M0 and improved
motion correction the method may become a valid
alternative for myocardial T1 quantification.
|
3852. |
40 |
Efficient 3D late
gadolinium enhancement imaging using the CLAWS respiratory
motion control algorithm
Jennifer Keegan1, Permi Jhooti2,
Peter Drivas1, Sonya Babu-Narayan1,
and David Firmin1,3
1Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, Royal
Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom, 2Radiological
Physics, University Hospital Basel, Basel, Switzerland, 3Imperial
College, London, United Kingdom
Free-breathing late gadolium enhancement (LGE) studies
are generally performed with diaphragmatic navigator
gating which is inherently inefficient, particularly in
the presence of respiratory drift. While the
continuously adaptive windowing strategy (CLAWS) is
highly efficient, changing the order of k-space coverage
in response to the diaphragm position during gadolinium
wash-out may potentially result in artefacts. We
acquired CLAWS and end-expiratory accept/reject (EE-ARA)
navigator gated 3D LGE studies in six patients. The
respiratory efficiency was significantly higher for the
CLAWS acquisitions and no k-space order related
artefacts were seen. CLAWS is a suitable method of
respiratory motion control free-breathing 3D LGE
acquisitions.
|
3853. |
41 |
Improved Method for
Retrograde Gating for Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Sohae Chung1, Pippa Storey1, and
Leon Axel1
1Center for Biomedical Imaging, Radiology
Department, NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, NY,
United States
In the conventional retrospective gating method, the
acquired data are typically interpolated onto equivalent
equally spaced intervals by linearly scaling the data to
fit into the average cycle. However, in the presence of
R-R variation which largely reflects differences in the
duration of diastasis, the usual linear time scaling
used in conventional retrospective gating method will
result in some temporal blurring and degradation of the
image quality. In this work, we proposed a 'retrograde
gating' method, which allows for retrospectively
including the late diastolic events preceding each QRS
detection in a fixed relation with the interval
following it.
|
3854. |
42 |
Cardiac MRI in Pediatric
Patients with Congenital Heart Disease: Comparison at 1.5T
and at 3.0T
Kim-Lien Nguyen1,2, Sarah N Khan3,
John Moriarty3, Kiyarash Mohajer3,
Pierangelo Renella3, Gary Satou4,
Swati Patel5, Ines Boechat3, and
Paul J Finn3
1Laboratory of Cardiac Energetics, NHLBI,
Bethesda, MD, United States, 2Division
of Cardiology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA,
United States,3Department of Radiology, David
Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, United States, 4Division
of Pediatric Cardiology, David Geffen School of Medicine
at UCLA, United States, 5Department
of Anesthesiology, David Geffen School of Medicine at
UCLA, United States
Widespread adoption of cardiac MR at 3.0T in the
clinical setting has been slow. To the best of our
knowledge, there have been no published reports on the
use of 3.0T for the imaging in pediatric congenital
heart disease. Our study demonstrates that cardiac MRI
at 3.0T in pediatric patients with congenital heart
disease and vascular abnormalities is feasible and
compares the technical and diagnostic performance with
an age-matched and clinically comparable control group
at 1.5 T.
|
3855. |
43 |
Isotropic whole-heart cine
imaging with atlas-based segmentation
Declan P O'Regan1, Wenjia Bai2,
Wenzhe Shi2, Giuliana Durighel1,
Tamara Diamond1, Daniel Rueckert2,
and Stuart A Cook1
1Robert Steiner MRI Unit, Imperial College
London, London, London, United Kingdom, 2Department
of Computing, Imperial College London, United Kingdom
|
3856. |
44 |
Method for Investigating
Respiratory Influence on Flow with Radial Trajectories
Ashley Gould Anderson III1, Eric Schrauben1,
Kevin Johnson1, and Oliver Wieben1,2
1Medical Physics, University of Wisconsin,
Madison, Wisconsin, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, United
States
A flexible technique for evaluation of respiratory
impact on cardiac-gated phase contrast flow acquisitions
is proposed. The method is demonstrated for the case of
2D CSF flow imaging during free breathing in the spinal
canal.
|
3857. |
45 |
Left Atrial Volume
Measurements Before and After Left Atrial Ablation for the
Treatment of Atrial Fibrillation
Jerry Dale Walker, Jr.1, Sathya Vijayakumar2,
Eugene Kholmovski2, Chris McGann1,
Nathan Burgon3, Joshua Cates3,
Alan Morris3, and Nassir Marrouche1
1Cardiovascular Division, University of Utah
School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2UCAIR
Radiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah,
United States, 3CARMA
Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United
States
This study evaluated left atrial (LA) volume
measurements using cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR)
based angiography before and after LA radio frequency (RF)
ablation therapy as a treatment strategy for atrial
fibrillation. This study employs the use of a novel
software program ( Corview ) to accurately calculate
left atrial volumes in patients who underwent CMR
enhanced MR angiography. The Corview software program
allows for segmentation and single slice analysis of
individual MRA images. The segmentations were then used
to compute the three-dimensional volume of the LA. LA
volumes were then recorded at different time intervals
to track for changes.
|
3858. |
46 |
Simultaneous Evaluation of
Blood and Tissue Velocities From Single VENC Phase-contrast
MR Imaging
Junmin Liu1, James White1,2, and
Maria Drangova1,3
1Imaging Research Laboratories, Robarts
research Institution, The University of Western Ontario,
London, Ontario, Canada, 2Division
of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, The University of
Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada, 3Department
of Medical Biophysics, The University of Western
Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
In this study we offer a unique approach to achieve
simultaneous evaluation of tissue and blood flow
velocities from a single low-VENC phase-contrast dataset
(i.e. prescribed for measurement of tissue velocities).
A novel phase unwrapping algorithm (PUROR) is tested for
this purpose. The in vivo results demonstrate that the
presented technique allows for simultaneous
quantification of cardiac tissue and blood flow
velocities within a single image acquisition.
|
3859. |
47 |
Free Breathing Real-Time
Functional Cardiac Imaging at 3 Tesla
Felix Schwab1, Florian Schwarz1,
Olaf Dietrich1, Konstantin Nikolaou1,
Carmel Hayes2, Maximilian Reiser1,
and Daniel Theisen1
1Department of Clinical Radiology, University
Hospital Grosshadern, Munich, Bavaria, Germany, 2Siemens
Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany
Free breathing single-shot real-time protocols can be
used for for functional cardiac imaging in cases of
arrhythmia and when patients do not tolerate breath
hold. This work investigate a volunteer study of several
such protocols at 3 Tesla. Consistency with the gold
standard cine protocols is found and SNR studies reveal
significantly improved image quality as compared to 1.5
Tesla.
|
3860. |
48 |
McKinnon-Bates
Sparsification for Accelerated Phase Contrast Imaging
Andrew L Wentland1,2, Oliver Wieben1,
Thomas M Grist2, and Kevin M Johnson1
1Medical Physics, University of Wisconsin
School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, WI, United
States, 2Radiology,
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine & Public
Health, Madison, WI, United States
Numerous procedures have been proposed in the literature
to accelerate the acquisition of phase contrast (PC)
data. However, these techniques require substantial
reconstruction times and can have unpredictable
artifacts and/or performance. We have explored
sparsifying preprocessing techniques to provide
relatively quick reconstruction of 2DPC data with very
few projections. Initial results produced magnitude and
velocity images of good quality with acceleration
factors up to 30. Flow measurements in the processed
images had good temporal fidelity and were consistent
with measurements from unprocessed images. This
algorithm may be useful for reducing the acquisition
time of 2DPC data or improving temporal resolution.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
|
MRA- Contrast & Non-Contrast
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 14:30 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3861.
|
49 |
High Temporal and Spatial
Resolution Imaging of Vascular Malformations of the
Extremities
Petrice Marie Mostardi1, Phillip M Young2,
Michael A McKusick2, and Stephen J Riederer1
1MR Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic,
Rochester, MN, United States, 2Radiology,
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States
Choice of treatment and treatment planning for vascular
malformations require accurate characterization of the
vascular lesion including its structure, extent, and
hemodynamics. The purpose of this work is to apply a
recently developed time-resolved CE-MRA technique, CAPR,
to perform high spatial and temporal resolution imaging
of peripheral vascular malformations that allows for
accurate lesion characterization and treatment planning.
Twelve patients studies have been performed and imaging
evaluation done, which show excellent diagnostic quality
time-resolved imaging of vascular malformations of the
upper and lower extremity.
|
3862. |
50 |
Early corticosteroid
treatment effects on MRI and Ultrasonography findings in
Giant Cell Arteritis
Thorsten Alexander Bley1, Matthias Reinhardt2,
Julia Geiger2, Michael Markl3,
Andreas Hetzel2, Andrasz Treszl4,
and Carolin Hauenstein2
1Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology,
University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg,
Germany, 2University
Hospital Freiburg,3Northwestern University, 4University
Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
Corticosteroids are the mainstay of treatment in Giant
cell arteritis (GCA). High resolution MRI and
color-coded duplex ultrasonography (CCDS) have proven
feasible for non-invasive diagnosis of mural
inflammatory changes in active GCA. This study indicates
that for first-time diagnostic imaging in GCA the
sensitive period of detecting univocal changes of
inflammation is very short, potentially as short as one
day. Therefore, CCDS or MRI examination of patients with
suspected GCA should be performed as soon as possible,
preferentially within the first day after onset of
steroid treatment.
|
3863. |
51 |
High Temporal Frame Rate
3D Spiral Head and Neck Magnetic Resonance Angiography:
Initial Experience
Bo Xu1,2, Pascal Spincemaille2,
Nanda Deepa Thimmappa2, Martin Prince2,
and Yi Wang1,2
1Biomedical Engineering, Cornell University,
Ithaca, New York, United States, 2Radiology,
Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York,
United States
Time resolved contrast enhanced intracranial MR
angiography is particularly challenging because of the
short arterial-venous time interval. In this work, a 3D
spiral Temporal Resolution Acceleration with Constrained
Evolution Reconstruction (TRACER) acquisition is
presented resulting in a very high temporal frame rate
head and neck MR angiogram.
|
3864. |
52 |
Non-invasive planning of
endovascular procedures in patients with peripheral arterial
occlusive disease: value of 125 µm³ spatial resolution
steady state MRA with a blood pool contrast agent
Winfried Albert Willinek1, Jack Boschewitz1,
Dariusch Reza Hadizadeh1, Guido Matthias
Kukuk1, Ute L Fahlenkamp1, Jürgen
Gieseke1,2, Carsten Meyer1, Kai
Wilhelm1, and Hans Heinz Schild1
1Radiology, University of Bonn, Bonn, NRW,
Germany, 2Clinical
Scientist, Philips Healthcare, Best, Netherlands
Steady state MRA (SSMRA) with blood pool contrast agents
(BPCA) overcomes the limited spatial resolution in first
pass imaging by offering a prolonged time window that
allows for increased spatial resolution with improved
sensitivity and specificity of stenosis grading in
patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease
(PAOD). We investigated the usefulness of 125 µm³
spatial resolution SSMRA for non-invasive planning of
endovascular procedures in critical limb ischemia (PAOD
III-IV). 125 µm³ spatial resolution SSMRA improved the
pre-interventional planning of endovascular procedures
by allowing to correctly predict stent size and location
of the intervention and, thus may influence therapeutic
decision making.
|
3865. |
53 |
Evolution of Image Quality
in View-Shared Time-Resolved 3D CE-MRA
Casey P. Johnson1, Thomas W. Polley1,
James F. Glockner1, Phillip M. Young1,
and Stephen J. Riederer1
1MR Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic,
Rochester, MN, United States
In time-resolved 3D CE-MRA, incomplete view sharing will
result in degradation of image quality. This has been
observed in traditional imaging and new applications.
The loss of image quality is dependent on the specific
time-resolved sequence parameters used. In this work,
the evolution of image quality as view sharing
progresses is quantitatively assessed in phantoms and in
vivo CE-MRA calf studies for various sequence
parameters. A fundamental tradeoff between vessel signal
and sharpness and its relation to the sequence temporal
footprint is investigated. Implications for various
applications are discussed.
|
3866. |
54 |
Time-Resolved 3D Dynamic
Contrast-Enhanced MR Angiography with Optimized Separate
Auto Calibration Signal Lines
Yutaka Natsuaki1, Randall Kroeker2,
Peter Schmitt3, J. Paul Finn4, and
Gerhard Laub5
1Siemens Healthcare, Los Angeles, CA, United
States, 2Siemens
Healthcare, Winnipeg, Canada, 3Siemens
Healthcare, Erlangen, Germany, 4Radiology,
UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United States, 5Siemens
Healthcare, San Francisco, CA, United States
Time-resolved 3D (“4D”) dynamic contrast-enhanced MR
angiography (DCE-MRA) offers combined anatomic and
hemodynamic information with fractional Gd contrast
doses. Time-resolved imaging with stochastic
trajectories (TWIST) is a view-sharing technique that
acquires the peripheral k-space region with lower
density while acquiring central data with full sampling.
With a conventional TWIST, auto-calibration signal (ACS)
lines for the parallel MRI are integrated in every
central data acquisition. In the current work, we
propose to modify the conventional TWIST by using an
optimized separate ACS lines to improve the image
quality of the peak carotid artery enhancements.
|
3867. |
55 |
Combined MRA and DCE
perfusion imaging of the liver using an IVD acquisition and
HYCR reconstruction with a single contrast injection
James H Holmes1, Kang Wang1, Mahdi
S Rahimi2, Frank R Korosec3,4,
Lauren A Keith4, Jens-Peter Kühn3,5,
Scott B Reeder3,4, and Jean H Brittain1
1Global Applied Science Laboratory, GE
Healthcare, Madison, WI, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison,
WI, United States, 3Radiology,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United
States, 4Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI,
United States, 5Department
of Diagnostic Radiology, University Greifswald,
Greifswald, MV, Germany
The current clinical standard of care currently requires
separate DCE and MRA acquisitions to evaluate liver
lesions and vasculature. New time-resolved imaging
methods can produce a series of dynamic images with high
temporal and spatial resolution. In this work we present
a novel contrast enhanced imaging method to acquire both
high resolution angiograms and high temporal resolution
perfusion images of the liver in a single acquisition.
This approach could eliminate the need for separate MRA
and DCE injections and produces co-registered MRA and
perfusion images to facilitate surgical and treatment
planning.
|
3868. |
56 |
Comparison of Diagnostic
Image Quality of HYPR and TRICKS for Peripheral MRA Exams in
Patients
Lauren Keith1, Mark Schiebler2,
Chris Francois2, Scott Reeder2,3,
and Frank Korosec1,2
1Medical Physics, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United
States, 3Biomedical
Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison,
WI, United States
Peripheral vascular disease (PVD) is a prevalent
condition and an important cause of morbidity.
Non-invasive diagnostic imaging is used to plan for both
surgical and percutaneous treatment of this disease.
Challenges for MRA of the peripheral vasculature include
the need for high spatial and temporal resolution. In
this clinical investigation, we compare the diagnostic
image quality of a method with high spatial and temporal
resolution (VIPR-HYPR) with current clinical MRA
techniques using DSA as reference standard. We
hypothesize that VIPR-HYPR will provide similar or
better image quality and that the improved temporal and
spatial resolution will provide increased diagnostic
confidence.
|
3869. |
57 |
Dynamical evaluation of
the longitudinal relaxation rate of blood after
administration of gadobenate dimeglumine for optimzed SS-MRA
Fabio Tedoldi1, Cristina Neira1,
Michele Anzidei2, Alessandro Napoli2,
Miles Kirchin3, Fulvio Uggeri1,
Beatrice Cavallo Marincola2, Fulvio Zaccagna2,
Carlo Catalano2, and Roberto Passariello2
1Centro Ricerche Bracco, Bracco Imaging Spa,
Colleretto Giacosa, Torino, Italy, 2Department
of Radiological Science, University of Rome ‘la
Sapienza’, Rome, Italy, 3Bracco
Imaging SpA, Global Medical and Regulatory Affairs,
Milan, Italy
Steady state magnetic resonance angiography (SS-MRA)
following gadobenate dimeglumine administration has been
shown to be feasible, but still not fully optimized. In
this work we have first validated, in vitro, an
inversion recovery gradient echo sequence for monitoring
fast evolving phenomena and then use it to determine the
longitudinal relaxation rate of blood after gadobenate
dimeglumine injection in human subjects and to derive a
tailored flip angle for SS-MRA with said gadolinium
based agent. The benefits of using a calibrated flip
angle in SS-MRA have been thus demonstrated in contrast
enhanced imaging of carotid arteries.
|
3870. |
58 |
Effect on Image Quality of
Carotid Three-Dimensional MR-Angiography: 1.0 M Gadobutrol
versus 0.5 M Gadoterate Meglumine at 3 Tesla scanner
RAYMOND LEE1, Gladys Lo Goh1, Kai
Ming Paul Au Yeung1, CHI WAI LIU1,
KA MAN CHAN1, and MEI LEE BETTY HUNG1
1Department of Diagnostic and Interventional
Radiology, Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital, Hong Kong,
Hong Kong, China
Improvements in 3D CEMRA image quality are needed to
achieve high diagnostic confidence. One approach to
overcoming the limitations of CEMRA is the introduction
of contrast agents with increased T1 relaxivity, which
leads to higher vessel signal intensity. Previous
studies showed contradictory results whether 1.0 M
gadobutrol could improve image quality over 0.5 M
gadolinium-based contrast, possibly because different
anatomic regions were examined and study design. As far
as the author knows, no previous study has compared the
effect of 1.0M Gadobutrol versus 0.5 M Gadoterate
Geglumine in carotid angiography by using a 3 Tesla MRI
scanner. Current study may give an insight whether 1.0M
Gadolinium-based contrast would improve the image
quality in carotid MR angiography.
|
3871. |
59 |
Steady-State Magnetic
Resonance Angiography of the Thoracic Vasculature in
Congenital Heart Disease using a Blood-Pool Contrast Agent:
Evaluation of Two Different Techniques
Jennifer A Febbo1, Mauricio S Galizia1,2,
Andrada R Popescu3, Xiaoming Bi4,
Jeremy Collins1, Michael Markl1,
Robert R Edelman2, and James C Carr1
1Department of Radiology, Northwestern
University-Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL,
United States, 2Department
of Radiology, NorthShore University HealthSystem,
Evanston, IL, United States, 3Department
of Medical Imaging, Children's Memorial Hospital,
Chicago, IL, United States,4Cardiovascular MR
R&D, Siemens Healthcare, Chicago, IL, United States
Twenty-three adult patients with congenital heart
disease were imaged with contrast-enhanced MRA using a
blood-pool contrast agent. The protocol consisted of a
first-pass (FP) MRA and two MRA sequences at the
steady-state (SS) contrast phase (5-10 min after
injection): inversion-recovery (IR) FLASH and IR-SSFP.
Image quality, the presence of pathology, and aortic
measurements in several vessels was recorded by two
observers. There was no significant difference in aortic
dimensions at all anatomic locations between FP-MRA and
SS-MRA. Image quality scores were higher for SS-MRA
compared to FP-MRA. More pathological abnormalities were
seen with SS-MRA than FP-MRA.
|
3872. |
60 |
Non-contrast-enhanced
peripheral MRA using velocity-selective saturation
preparation
Taehoon Shin1, Bob S Hu2, and
Dwight G Nishimura1
1Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States, 2Palo
Alto Medical Foundation, Palo Alto, CA, United States
We propose a new non-contrast-enhanced (NCE) lower leg
MRA method which allows high artery-background contrast
from a single 3D acquisition. The key component of the
proposed method is a velocity-selective magnetization
preparation at systole which saturates all tissues
except arterial blood using high velocity selectivity.
Unlike existing subtractive 3D methods, this new method
removes the need for two acquisitions and is insensitive
to elevated diastolic flow or arrhythmia unlike existing
subtractive 3D methods. In-vivo tests on healthy
volunteers show excellent depiction of arteries over a
wide range of velocity-saturation bandwidths.
|
3873. |
61 |
Non-contrast Enhanced
Time-Resolved 4D MRA using Multi-bolus TrueSTAR
Lirong Yan1, and Danny JJ Wang1
1Neurology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, United
States
Non-contrast time-resolved 4-D MR angiography (MRA) has
been proposed recently by combining pulsed ASL with a
segmented multi-phase trueFISP sequence (TrueSTAR).
However, the SNR of dynamic MRA signal is limited and
the labeled blood relaxes within a short duration
following the labeling pulse. The present study proposes
a novel multi-bolus TrueSTAR technique that employs a
train of intermittent inversion pulses interleaved with
multi-phase trueFISP acquisitions. The experimental data
show that this technique can provide an enhanced and
prolonged labeling bolus for dynamic MRA without
sacrificing imaging speed or temporal resolution.
|
3874. |
62 |
Clinical Validation of
Non-Contrast Abdominal MRA with Quadruple Inversion-Recovery
Prepared 3D b-SSFP
Iliyana Atanasova1,2, Ruth Lim2,
Hersh Chandarana2, David Stoffel2,
Mary Bruno2, Daniel Kim3, and
Vivian Lee3
1Columbia University, New York, New York,
United States, 2New
York University, New York, NY, United States, 3The
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT
An inflow-based non-contrast angiography sequence with
quadruple inversion-recovery preconditioning and 3D b-SSFP
readout (NC-MRA) has been developed for abdominopelvic
MRA. We evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of this method
for detection of aortoiliac disease in 21 patients using
gadolinium-enhanced MRA (CE-MRA) as a reference
standard. Two blinded radiologists rated image quality,
disease severity, and artifacts on a per-segment basis.
Image quality of CE-MRA was superior to NC-MRA; however,
97% of all evaluated non-contrast segments were judged
diagnostic. Of all evaluable segments with CE-MRA
available, overall accuracy/sensitivity/specificity of
NC-MRA was 93%/75%/95% respectively, indicating good
diagnostic accuracy of the non-contrast technique.
|
3875. |
63 |
High Resolution Non
Contrast-Enhanced MRA of the Hand and Forearm Arteries Using
ECG-triggered Quiescent-Interval Single-Shot (QISS)
Technique
Ning Jin1, Christopher Glielmi1,
Xiaoming Bi1, Georgeta Mihai2,
Eugene Dunkle3, Robert R Edelman3,
Sven Zuehlsdorff1, Orlando P Simonetti2,
and Sanjay Rajagopalan2
1Cardiovascular R&D, Siemens Healthcare,
Chicago, IL, United States, 2Dorothy
M. Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute, The Ohio
State University, Columbus, OH, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, NorthShore University Health System,
Evanston, IL, United States
MRA of the forearms and hands is particularly
challenging. There is a renewed interest in non
contrast-enhanced (NCE) MRA techniques given the
concerns of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis in patients
with chronic kidney disease. Recently, QISS MRA
technique has been implemented for imaging of the lower
extremities and demonstrated to be rapid, easy to use,
and insensitive to patient motion, heart rate and flow
patterns. The purpose of this study was to investigate
the feasibility of high resolution NCE-MRA of the hand
and forearm arteries using the QISS technique.
|
3876. |
64 |
High Acceleration
Quiescent-Interval Single Shot Magnetic Resonance
Angiography at 1.5 and 3T
Christopher Glielmi1, Maria Carr2,
Xiaoming Bi1, Peter Schmitt3,
Mauricio Galizia2,4, Judith Wood2,
Robert R. Edelman4, Michael Markl2,
James Carr2, and Jeremy Collins2
1Cardiovascular MR R&D, Siemens Healthcare,
Chicago, Illinois, United States, 2Northwestern
Memorial Hospital and Northwestern University Feinberg
School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, United States, 3MR
Application & Workflow Development, Siemens AG,
Erlangen, Germany, 4NorthShore
University HealthSystem, Evanston, Illinois, United
States
Quiescent-Interval Single Shot (QISS) is a non-contrast
MRA technique with proven clinical utility as an
alternative to contrast-enhanced MRA (CE-MRA) at 1.5T.
3T QISS can potentially provide improved image quality
and enable higher acceleration factors. This study
compares QISS at 1.5 and 3T with high acceleration
factors in healthy volunteers. In addition, the
diagnostic quality of QISS at 3T in patients with
peripheral artery disease (PAD) was evaluated. Results
show improved image quality at 3T, maintained vessel
conspicuity at high acceleration factors, and clinical
utility of 3T QISS in patients with peripheral artery
disease.
|
3877. |
65 |
Vessel-selective
non-contrast enhanced time-resolved MR angiography using
PULSER prepared 4D T1TFE in intracranial arteries
Masanobu Nakamura1, Masami Yoneyama1,
Tomoyuki Okuaki1, Takashi Tabuchi1,
Atsushi Takemura2, Makoto Obara2,
Thomas Kwee3, Taro Takahara4, and
Satoshi Tsutsumi5
1Yaesu clinic, Tokyo, Japan, 2Philips
Electronics Japan, Tokyo, Japan, 3University
Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands, 4Tokai
University School of Engineering, Kanagawa, Japan, 5Juntendo
University Urayasu Hospital, Chiba, Japan
We have proposed vessel - selective 3D volumetric non
-contrast time- resolved MRA technique termed Contrast
inherent inflow enhanced multi phase angiography ( v-sel
CINEMA ). In this study the vessel selective PULSER
preparation module was combined with a 4D T1 TFE readout
that has previously been shown to generate time resolved
MRA in healthy volunteers as well as in patients
carrying cerebrovascular abnormalities. vsCINEMA could
extract the blood flow in the whole brain at an interval
of about 200 ms with a high degree of vessel specificity
and showed good agreement compared to TOF-MRA and MR-DSA
. vsCINEMA allows visualizing the dynamics of cerebral
blood flow with high spatial and temporal resolutions.
Patients carrying cerebrovascular pathologies such as
AVM and moyamoya disease are good candidates for further
investigations.
|
3878. |
66 |
Non contrast enhanced 3D
volumetric time-resolved MRA combining multiple phase
pCASL(CINEMA-pCASL)
Masanobu Nakamura1, Masami Yoneyama1,
Tomoyuki Okuaki1, Takashi Tabuchi1,
Atsushi Takemura2, Makoto Obara2,
and Taro Takahara3
1Yaesu clinic, Tokyo, Japan, 2Philips
Electronics Japan, Tokyo, Japan, 3Tokai
University School of Engineering, Kanagawa, Japan
Recently we have proposed 3D volumetric non -contrast
time -resolved MRA technique termed Contrast inherent
inflow enhanced multi phase angiography combining
multiple phases pseudo -continuous arterial spin
labeling (CINEMA -pCASL). CINEMA-pCASL was developed as
a technique that enables diachronic observation of
hemodynamic as in DSA and extensive 3D volume
acquisition with the whole brain as a target. We present
a preliminary study of CINEMA-pCASL sequence and discuss
its clinical relevance.
|
3879. |
67 |
Dynamic non-contrast
enhanced Angiography based on Superselective Arterial Spin
Labeling and Compressed Sensing
Michael Helle1, Mariya Doneva1,
Matthias JP van Osch2, and Peter Börnert1
1Research Laboratories, Philips Technologie
GmbH, Innovative Technologies, Hamburg, Hamburg,
Germany, 2C.J.
Gorter Center for high field MRI, Department of
Radiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden,
Netherlands
In the diagnosis of many cerebrovascular diseases highly
resolved spatial and temporal images as well as
vessel-selective information are required. Existing MR
angiography techniques lack at least one of these
demanded properties so that digital subtraction
angiography (DSA) is still considered the gold-standard
for cerebral angiography although the procedure is
invasive and bears the risk of severe complications. In
this study, superselective arterial spin labeling in
combination with compressed sensing is employed to
provide vessel-selective, temporally and spatially
highly resolved angiograms with the potential to
overcome limitations of existing MR methods and
potentially provide the same information as with DSA.
|
3880. |
68 |
Unenhanced MR Liver
Circulation Imaging using a Triple Inversion Recovery ASL
Technique
Marcelo E Andia1, and Rene M Botnar1
1Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical
Engineering, Kings College London, London, London,
United Kingdom
Recently we have developed a new Arterial Spin Labeling
technique without the need of subtraction based on the
use of a triple inversion recovery pre-pulse. In this
work we investigated the feasibility of selectively
visualizing the portal vein, hepatic artery and hepatic
vein in healthy subjects.
|
3881. |
69 |
Intracranial microvascular
imaging at 7T MRI : A comparison of the different RF coils
Myung-Kyun Woo1, Chang-Ki Kang1,
Suk-Min Hong1, Kyoung-Nam Kim1,
Joshua Park1, Hongbae Jeong1,
Hongbae Jeong1, Hongbae Jeong1,
Young-Bo Kim1, and Zang-Hee Cho1
1Neuroscience Research Institute, Gachon
University, Incheon, Korea
The RF coil could contribute significantly to the
quality of the intracranial microvascular imaging in
ultra-high-field MRI. We have investigated several
different types of RF coils and analyzed their relative
performance in terms of SNR profiles and resolutions.
The overlapped 6-channel coil exhibited highest
performance, especially for angiographic imaging, due to
its improved penetration depth, i.e., overall improved
SNR.
|
3882. |
70 |
Non-Contrast MRA of Pedal
Arteries in Type II Diabetes: Effect of Disease Load on
Vessel Visibility
Lijuan Zhang1, Na Zhang1, Weiqi
Liao1, Xin Liu1, Yang Liu1,
Dehe Weng2, Renate Jerecic3, Fei
Feng4, Zhaoyang Fan5, and Debiao
Li5
1SIAT, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen,
Guangdong, China, 2Siemens
Healthcare, China, 3Siemens
Healthcare, 4Peking
University Shenzhen Hospital, 5Cedars
Sinai Medical Center, LA, USA
Non-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (NC-MRA) have
attracted rising interest in peripheral artery imaging
with the benefit of avoiding the risk of contrast
induced nephropathy. However, it remains challenging to
image the diseased peripheral arteries with NC-MRA
especially in diabetic patients whose local and/or
systemic disease load intrinsic to the diabetes may
substantially complicated the overall vessel visibility.
Exploration the effect of intrinsic disease load on the
image quality of NC-MRA would help optimize candidate
selection and disease management of diabetes in the
clinical practice.
|
3883. |
71 |
Evaluation of 3D Non-Rigid
Algorithms for the Registration of the Lower Legs in MRA
Daniel Foley1, Barry Sheane1, Mark
Knox1, Dearbhail O’Driscoll1,
Niall Sheehy1, James F. Meaney1,2,
and Andrew J. Fagan1,2
1Centre for Advanced Medical Imaging (CAMI),
St. James's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland, 2School
of Medicine, Trinity College, University of Dublin,
Ireland
The use of a simple registration procedure has been
shown to improve image quality in MR angiography images
of the lower legs. The aim of this study was to
investigate the use of more sophisticated registration
algorithms designed specifically to deal with pre- and
post-contrast signal intensity differences. Significant
improvements using these algorithms were noted in a
clinical evaluation of the diagnostic image quality,
while contrast-to-noise ratios of the blood vessels were
also significantly improved. Of concern was the
observation that simple algorithms degraded the vessel
integrity in the registered images, which could lead to
mis-diagnoses of apparent stenoses.
|
3884. |
72 |
Comparison between
Breath-hold and Navigator-gated Magnetization-Prepared 3D
Steady-State Free Precession for Nonenhanced Renal Magnetic
Resonance Angiography
Huan Tan1, Ioannis Koktzoglou1,2,
Christopher Glielmi3, Mauricio Galizia4,
and Robert Edelman1,4
1NorthShore University HealthSystem,
Evanston, IL, United States, 2The
University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine,
Chicago, IL, United States,3Siemens
Healthcare, Chicago, IL, 4Northwestern
University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL
Nonenhanced, navigator-gated, inversion-prepared MR
angiography technique (Nav SSFP) has proven accurate for
evaluating the patency of renal arteries. However, the
scan time of Nav SSFP can be excessive depending on
breathing patterns. A highly efficient single-shot 3D
SSFP technique was implemented to allow the full extent
of the renal arteries to be depicted in a single
breath-hold (BH SSFP). Overall, BH SSFP demonstrated
comparable image quality, SNR and CNR in volunteers and
patients despite a mean eight-fold reduction in scan
time. The initial results suggested a potential
supplementary clinical role for BH SSFP in the
evaluation of suspected renal artery disease.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
|
Myocardial Perfusion & Non-Contrast MRA
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
14:30 - 15:30 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3885. |
49 |
Repeatability of
quantitative first-pass perfusion MRI in the mouse
myocardium
Bastiaan J. van Nierop1, Bram F. Coolen1,
Wouter J.R. Dijk1, Larry de Graaf1,
Klaas Nicolay1, and Gustav J. Strijkers1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering,
Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven,
Netherlands
The repeatability of quantitative, first-pass perfusion
MRI in the healthy mouse heart was evaluated. A
dual-bolus approach was used for accurate determination
of the arterial input function (AIF). Direct
experimental evidence from 28 pre-boluses showed that
this approach results in an unsaturated AIF, by
establishing linearity of the AIF signal intensity with
Gd-DTPA concentration. Next, myocardial perfusion
(ml/min/g) was quantified in 9 mice using a Fermi
constraint deconvolution model. The repeatability was
demonstrated by measuring perfusion at two time points.
The resulting between-session coefficient of variation
(11%) makes this method well-suited for longitudinal
studies in mouse models of cardiac disease.
|
3886. |
50 |
Variable-Density Spiral
Adenosine Stress Perfusion Imaging Detects Coronary Artery
Disease with High Diagnostic Accuracy
Michael Salerno1,2, Christopher T Sica3,
Craig H Meyer4, and Christopher M Kramer5,6
1Internal Medicine, Cardiology, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, Va, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United
States, 3Center
for NMR Research, Penn State Hershey Medical Center,
Hershey, PA, United States, 4Biomedical
Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville,
VA, United States, 5Radiology,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va, United
States, 6Internal
Medicine, Cardiology, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA, United States
We demonstrate that adenosine stress CMR using variable
density spiral perfusion pulse sequences accurately
detects obstructive coronary artery disease. These pulse
sequences produce high quality perfusion images with
minimal artifacts resulting in high diagnostic accuracy.
|
3887. |
51 |
Quantitative Cardiac 17O
MRI: Initial Validation Study
Jie Zheng1, David Muccigrosso1,
Adil Bashir1, Pradeep Gupte2, and
Robert J. Gropler1
1Washington University, Saint Louis,
Missouri, United States, 2Rockland
Technimed, Ltd, United States
Quantification of myocardial oxygen consumption using
17O-CMR was validated in this study using microsphere
measurements and blood sampling in normal dogs. Further
evaluation was performed in dogs with severe coronary
artery stenosis. The oxygen consumption rates measured
by 17O-CMR strongly agreed with reference values.
Increases in oxygen consumption rate in severely
ischemic regions reflect increased oxygen extraction to
compensate substantial loss in oxygen supply, as
expected.
|
3888. |
52 |
Evaluation of semi
quantitative perfusion parameter maps generated based on a
fully automated non-rigid motion correction during a first
pass myocardial perfusion (FPMP) MRI
Aya Kino1, Mauricio S Galizia1,
Andrada R Popescu2, Rhaul Rustogi1,
Darshit Thakrar1, Jeremy D Collins1,
Christopher Glielmi3, Hui Xue4,
Jens Guehring4, Sven Zuehlsdorff5,
Daniel Lee6, and James Carr1
1Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United
States, 2Radiology,
Children Memorial Hospital, Chicago, IL, United States, 3Siemens
Healthcare, Siemens, 4Corporate
Research USA, Siemens, Princenton, New Jersey, 5Siemens
Healthcare, Siemens, Chicago, IL, 6Medicine
Cardiology Division, Northwestern University, Chicago,
IL
The purpose of this study is to evaluate semi
quantitative perfusion parameter maps generated based on
a fully automated non-rigid motion correction during a
first pass myocardial perfusion (FPMP) MRI in patients
with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) or coronary
micro vascular disease (CMVD)
|
3889. |
53 |
Comparison of Cardiac
Stress MR Perfusion Imaging With and Without Non-Rigid
Motion Correction
Pamela K. Woodard1, Matthew R. Lyons2,
Sven Zuehlsdorff3, Gary McNeal4,
Agus Priatna4, Cylen Javidan-Nejad5,
Ibrahim M. Saeed6, Hui Xue7,
Christopher Glielmi4, and Robert J. Gropler5
1Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology,
Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis,
Missouri, United States, 2Cardiology,
Case Western School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio, United
States, 3Siemens
Medical Solutions, Erlangen, Germany, 4Siemens
Medical Systems, Malvern, PA, United States,5Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United States, 6Cardiology,
Saint Lukes Hospital, Kansas City, MO, United States, 7Siemens
Corporate Research, Princeton, New Jersey, United States
A framework for non-rigid multimodal registration has
been created and applied to compensate for distortions
between EPI images and anatomical MRI volumes. Initially
applied in brain MR imaging, this technique has now been
applied to a cardiac perfusion sequence to be used with
pharmacologic stress imaging. The implemented algorithm
uses a key frame of the dynamic data set during the
first pass of contrast agent as the reference frame.
Subsequently, all other frames are registered using a
nonrigid registration algorithm. Myocardial perfusion
imaging was performed in patients with image
reconstruction without and with motion correction. More
perfusion defects were visible with motion correction
than without.
|
3890. |
54 |
Steady-state first-pass
perfusion (SSFPP): A 3D "TWIST" in myocardial first-pass
perfusion imaging
Shivraman Giri1, Hui Xue2, Abdul
Wattar1, Yu Ding1, Randall Kroeker3,
Gerhard Laub4, Peter Kellman5,
Sven Zuehlsdorff6, Subha V. Raman1,
and Orlando P. Simonetti1
1The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH,
United States, 2Siemens
Corporate Research, Princeton, NJ, United States, 3Siemens
Healthcare, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, 4Siemens
Healthcare, San Francisco, CA, United States, 5National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States, 6Siemens
Healthcare, Chicago, Il, United States
We present a new approach to 3D myocardial first-pass
perfusion imaging. The technique uses EKG-gated SSFP
sequence such that data is acquired only during
mid-diastole, whereas the magnetization is maintained in
steady-state at other times. TWIST acquisition scheme is
combined with GRAPPA to achieve the desired
acceleration; the dynamic 3D frames were then
motion-corrected using 3D non-rigid registration.
Finally, pixel-wise contrast enhancement ratio (CER)
images were generated to improve visualization.
|
3891. |
55 |
Feasibility of Detecting
Myocardial Ischemia Using First-Pass Contrast MRI and
Regadenoson
Pamela K. Woodard1, Matthew R. Lyons2,
Cylen Javidan-Nejad3, Ibrahim M. Saeed4,
Donna Lesniak5, Gary McNeal6, Agus
Priatna6, Sven Zuehlsdorff7, and
Robert J. Gropler3
1Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology,
Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis,
Missouri, United States, 2Cardiology,
Case Western School of Medicine, Cleveland, Ohio, United
States, 3Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St. Louis, MO, United States,4Cardiology,
Saint Lukes Hospital, Kansas City, MO, United States, 5Mallinckrodt
Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of
Medicine, St., Louis, MO, United States, 6Siemens
Medical Systems, Malvern, PA, United States, 7Siemens
Medical Systems, Erlangen, Germany
Cardiac stress MR perfusion imaging requires an MRI
compatible infusion pump for the administration of
adenosine or a non-MRI compatible pump housed in the
control room or beyond the 10-Gauss line. This later
method requires high-pressure extension tubing running
for some distance across the control room and/or scan
room floor. This has the potential to compromise both
the quality of the examination and patient safety.
Regadenoson is a recently FDA-approved A2A receptor
agonist which can be given intravenously in a single 400
microgram bolus. We hypothesize that a single injection
of regadenoson could be used instead of an adenosine
infusion to produce coronary vasodilatation and
demonstrate myocardial ischemia during first-pass
perfusion cardiac MRI. Forty-four patient were imaged.
All but one patient tolerated the regadenoson cardiac MR
perfusion examination. Regadenoson can be used safely in
cardiac MR perfusion imaging to demonstrate ischemia.
|
3892. |
56 |
Spatiotemporal Filtering
of Myocardial ASL Data: Implications in Detection and
Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease
Terrence Jao1, Zungho Zun2,
Padmini Varadarajan3, Ramdas Pai3,
and Krishna Nayak4
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, California, United
States, 2Division
of Radiology, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford,
California, United States, 3Division
of Cardiology, Loma Linda University Medical Center, 4Electrical
Engineering, University of Southern California
ASL is a promising technique for the quantification of
myocardial perfusion and perfusion reserve in humans,
ultimately for the diagnosis of coronary artery disease
(CAD). The primary challenges are image misregistration
and low signal to physiological noise ratio. Image
registration and spatio-temporal filtering techniques
can offset these setbacks. In this work, we evaluate how
the choice of spatial filter parameters ultimately
impacts the sensitivity and specificity of ASL
myocardial perfusion reserve as a clinical tool for the
diagnosis of CAD.
|
3893. |
57 |
Free-breathing first-pass
3D perfusion imaging of the heart
Johannes F.M. Schmidt1, Lukas Wissmann1,
Robert Manka1,2, Peter Boesiger1,
and Sebastian Kozerke1
1Institute for Biomedical Engineering,
University and ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Department
of Cardiology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich,
Switzerland
Scan acceleration methods have proven invaluable for
dynamic contrast-enhanced perfusion imaging. One
practical issue, however, relates to the requirement of
breathholding or shallow breathing which cannot always
be ensured in clinical routine exams. An extended k-t
PCA algorithm is proposed which corrects for non-rigid
frame-to-frame motion based on motion operators derived
from two pencil-beam navigators for feet-head and
anterior-posterior motion detection and the fully
sampled k-t training data. It is demonstrated that this
approach successfully corrects for respiratory motion
artifacts and hence enables free-breathing 3D cardiac
perfusion MRI.
|
3894. |
58 |
Uptake and Retention Maps
for Myocardial Perfusion Analysis: Application in Duchenne
Muscular Dystrophy
William Kerwin1, Anna Naumova1,
Rainer Storb2, Stephen Tapscott2,
and Zejing Wang2
1Radiology, University of Washington,
Seattle, WA, United States, 2Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA, United
States
The goal of this effort was to develop an intuitive, but
physiologically meaningful method for quantifying
myocardial perfusion by CMRI and to test the method on a
dog model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD). The
perfusion model characterized contrast kinetics using
parametric maps of agent uptake and retention. Both
parameters appeared to be altered in dogs with DMD
compared to normal controls.
|
3895. |
59 |
Absolute quantification of
myocardial blood flow using CAMM estimation of the AIF
Jacob U Fluckiger1, Brandon C Benefield2,
Kathleen R. Harris2, and Daniel C Lee2
1Radiology, Northwestern University, Chicago,
Il, United States, 2Cardiology,
Northwestern University, Chicago, Il, United States
In this work we present results using the constrained
alternating minimization with model method for
determining the arterial input function. This method
estimates the input function directly from the
myocardial tissue curves, using the LV blood pool signal
as a constraint. The input function can then be used to
quantify blood flow in compartmental analyses. We
present preliminary work comparing this method with a
dual bolus method using a microsphere validation.
|
3896. |
60 |
Cine-ASL: new arterial
spin labeling method for myocardial perfusion mapping in
mice using a Cine-FLASH labeling and readout module
Thomas Troalen1, Thibaut Capron1,
Monique Bernard1, Patrick Cozzone1,
and Frank Kober1
1Centre de Résonance Magnétique Biologique et
Médicale (CRMBM), UMR CNRS N°6612, Faculté de Médecine,
Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille, France
This study presents a novel arterial spin labeling
method to assess myocardial perfusion in small rodents.
An ECG-gated steady-pulsed labeling approach is combined
with simultaneous readout over the cardiac cycle using
Cine-FLASH. Perfusion measurements were carried out on
twenty mice with both techniques. Perfusion maps and
values show good accordance between both experiments.
This method allows shorter acquisition times than the
previously used Look-Locker FAIR gradient-echo technique
while preserving spatial resolution and robustness with
respect to cardiac motion. In addition, the stationary
regime offers the possibility to increase the signal to
noise ratio by averaging over cardiac cycles.
|
3897.
|
61 |
Comparison of Subtractive
and Non-Subtractive Nonenhanced MR Angiography for
Peripheral Arterial Disease: A Pilot Study
Emily Ward1, NavYash Gupta2,
Eugene Dunkle1, Christopher Glielmi3,
and Robert R. Edelman1,4
1Radiology, NorthShore University
HealthSystem, Evanston, Illinois, United States, 2NorthShore
University HealthSystem, 3Siemens
Healthcare,4Radiology, Northwestern
University, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Nonenhanced techniques can be a useful alternative to
contrast-enhanced MRA for patients with peripheral
arterial disease. Both subtractive and non-subtractive
approaches have been proposed. The purpose of this pilot
study was to determine the relative merits and accuracy
of the two types of nonenhanced approaches. Our data
showed good sensitivity and excellent inter-observer
agreement for PAD using either subtractive or
non-subtractive nonenhanced MRA. In this pilot study,
specificity and image quality were significantly better
for QISS than Native SPACE, due to substantially reduced
sensitivity to motion artifacts and lack of dependence
on selection of trigger delays.
|
3898.
|
62 |
Non-Contrast-Enhanced
Flow-Independent 3D Peripheral Angiography with Sliding
Interleaved Concentric Cylinders
Kie Tae Kwon1, Holden H. Wu1,2,
Taehoon Shin1, Adam B. Kerr1,
Dwight G. Nishimura1, and Jean H. Brittain3
1Electrical Engineering, Stanford University,
Stanford, CA, United States, 2Cardiovascular
Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United
States,3MR Global Applied Science Laboratory,
GE Healthcare, Madison, WI, United States
Non-contrast-enhanced flow-independent angiography (FIA)
exploits intrinsic tissue parameters such as T1, T2 and
chemical shift, and thereby generates stable vessel
contrast even under slow-flow conditions in the lower
extremities. Magnetization-prepared 3D SSFP sequences
have been of interest for FIA, but an important
challenge with these sequences is artery-vein contrast.
In this work, a variation of SLINKY (Sliding Interleaved
ky) acquisition was incorporated into a 3D concentric
cylinders SSFP FIA sequence to improve artery-vein
contrast in the lower extremities by suppressing the
venous signal while retaining an arterial
flow-independent approach.
|
3899. |
63 |
Evaluation of a
Non-Contrast-Enhanced MR Angiography method in PVD patients
and comparison with TRICKS
Andrew Nicholas Priest1, Ilse Joubert1,
Teik Choon See1, Andrew Philip Winterbottom1,
Martin John Graves1, and David John Lomas1
1Department of Radiology, Addenbrookes
Hospital and Cambridge University, Cambridge, United
Kingdom
This study assesses the diagnostic performance of
VANESSA, a new non-contrast-enhanced MRA technique, in
patients with peripheral vascular disease, by comparison
with our standard clinical contrast-enhanced protocol
using TRICKS. The lower legs of 34 patients were imaged
using both techniques, and two reviewers evaluated eight
arterial segments for each dataset. The specificity and
sensitivity for detection of significant disease
(stenosis > 50%) were 75.6% and 91.4% when evaluated per
segment, 89.7% and 72.7% when evaluated per limb and
97.6% and 44.4% when evaluated per patient. This method
could be used to select patients for further
investigation, reducing unnecessary Gadolinium
administration.
|
3900. |
64 |
Non-contrast enhanced 3D
pulmonary MRA with vein-artery differentiation
Tzu-Cheng Chao1,2, Ming-Ting Wu3,
Maria Alejandra Durán Mendicuti4, and Bruno
Madore4
1Institute of Medical Informatics, National
Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, 2Department
of Computer Science and Information Engineering, Naional
Cheng Kung University, Tainan, Taiwan, 3Department
of Radiology, Kaohsiung Veteran General Hospital,
Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 4Department
of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Routinely-used pulmonary angiography methods, such as
CTA and CE-MRA, require the administration of an
intravenous contrast agent. These protocols are not
generally suitable for subjectswith low renal function.
A modified 3D slab-interleaved sequence is proposed here
for non-contrast enhanced 3D pulmonary MRA. A
retrospective ECG gated reconstruction with hybrid
parallel imaging technique is introduced to accelerate
the acquisition and to time-resolve the entire cardiac
cycle. In addition to conventional vessel images, the
proposed strategy can differentiate veins from arteries
based on vessel pulsatility, to further facilitate the
image interpretation.
|
3901. |
65 |
Self-gated Free-breathing
Non-contrast Renal MRA
Yibin Xie1,2, Zhaoyang Fan2, Rola
Saouaf2, Yutaka Natsuaki3, Gerhard
Laub3, and Debiao Li1,2
1University of California, Los Angeles,
California, United States, 2Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center, Los Angeles, California, United States, 3Siemens
Healthcare, Los Angeles
Free-breathing bSSFP MR angiography with slab-selective
inversion preparation has been successfully used in
clinic to provide bright blood renal MRA without
contrast. It typically uses regulated breathing,
respiratory bellow, or pencil-beam navigators to
alleviate breathing motion artifacts, all of which have
practical issues limiting the usage of this technique.
This work attempts to overcome these issues with a
self-gating technique which uses the projections of the
imaging volume to gate data acquisition. Preliminary
results from volunteer studies showed comparable image
quality versus conventional navigator-gating.
|
3902. |
66 |
A non-linear subtraction
method for MRA
Yongquan Ye1, Dongmei Wu2, and
E.Mark Haacke1
1Radiology, Wayne State University, Detroit,
MI, United States, 2Department
of Physics, East China Normal University, Shanghai,
China
We designed an interleaved-TR sequence for simultaneous
flow rephased/dephased imaging. And by using subtraction
method by self-squaring the images prior to the
subtraction, not only the artery/tissue contrast is
maintained or enhanced relative to linear subtraction,
but also the venous signal is greatly reduced,
generating MRA result with minimized venous
contamination.
|
3903. |
67 |
ECG-gated Fast Spin Echo
MRA with Interleaved Acquisition of Systolic and Diastolic
Data for Improved Robustness to Motion
Iliyana Atanasova1,2, Pippa Storey2,
Daniel Kim3, Ruth Lim2, and Vivian
Lee3
1Columbia University, New York, New York,
United States, 2New
York University, New York, NY, United States, 3The
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT
In ECG-gated spin-echo based non-contrast MRA (FSE-MRA)
bright blood angiograms are obtained by subtracting
sequentially acquired systolic and diastolic images.
This technique can provide excellent depiction of the
arteries, but suffers from poor tolerance to patient
motion. We hypothesize that interleaving the acquisition
of systolic and diastolic partitions may improve
robustness to motion. Our results demonstrate that it is
feasible to implement FSE-MRA with systolic-diastolic
interleaving. Results in one volunteer, instructed to
perform controlled movements, suggest that the
interleaved acquisition may be more robust to motion
compared to a sequential scan.
|
3904. |
68 |
Effect of prone vs. supine
positioning and hydration on lower extremity venography
Moazzem Kazi1, Nanda Deepa Thimmappa1,
Neil Khilnani1, Yi Wang1, and
Martin R. Prince1
1Radiology, Weill Cornell Medical College,
New York, NY, United States
Patients are normally imaged in the supine position and
often dehydrated for MR venography of the lower
extremity veins. The purpose of this study was to
determine the effect of supine vs. prone positioning and
hydration status on the common femoral vein luminal
size. Our data indicates the importance of hydration for
reducing underfilling of antedependent veins and
repeating MR venography prone to distinguish physiologic
underfilling from pathologic narrowing.
|
3905. |
69 |
Non-contrast Enahanced MR
angiography combined with peripheral cardiac gating at 3T:
Comparison of respiratory triggered and breath held
technique
Takayuki Masui1, Motoyuki Katayama1,
Kimihiko Sato1, Kazuma Terauchi1,
Kei Tsukamoto1, Masayoshi Sugimura1,
Naoyuki Takei2, Mitsuharu Miyoshi2,
Kenichi Mizuki1, and Harumi Sakahara3
1Radiology, Seirei Hamamatsu General
Hospital, Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, Japan, 2Applied
Science laboratory, GE Healthcare, Hino, Tokyo, Japan,3Radiology,
Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, Hamamatsu,
Shizuoka, Japan
Non-contrast (NC) MRA with peripheral cardiac pulse
gating (PG) using respiratory triggering (RT) or
breath-held (BH) technique at 3T can be obtained in
relatively short period time using ARC and fan beam
k-space view ordering and well demonstrate the renal
arteries and aorta due to suppression of systolic flow
effects. Overall, RT NC MRA with PG provides better
visualization of peripheral renal arteries with good
background suppression. When image quality of RT NC MRA
is not enough to evaluate arteries, BH NC MRA can be
used as substitute.
|
3906. |
70 |
A Simple Noncontrast FBI
Technique for Peripheral Run-Offs: Development of Automatic
Algorithm to Find Systolic and Diastolic Triggering Delays
Mitsue Miyazaki1,2, Naoyuki Furudate2,
Jill S Chotiyanonta1, Akiyoshi Yamamoto3,
and Katsumi Nakamura3
1MRI, Toshiba Medical Research Institute,
Vernon Hills, IL, United States, 2Toshiba
Medical Systems Corp., Otawara, Tochigi, Japan, 3Tobata
Kyoritsu Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan
In noncontrast FBI run-off MRA, finding the systolic and
diastolic ECG triggering delay times is an important
factor to influence the resulting FBI images. A simple
auto-ECG algorithm using heart rate was developed to
determine the systolic and diastolic triggering delay
times. The result of the auto-ECG and the manual ECG-prep
method gives similar image quality in all 12 volunteers.
In addition, the total operator examination time for
three-station run-offs was tremendously improved using
the auto-ECG.
|
3907. |
71 |
Renal Artery MRA with
Time-SLIP: Comparison Between a 3-T System Incorporating
Multi-phase Transmission and a 1.5-T System
Kuninori Kobayashi1, Isao Miyazaki1,
Ooto Makio1, Masamichi Imai2,
Kenichi Yokoyama2, Kazuhiro Tsuchiya2,
Mitsue Miyazaki3, Kenji Yodo4,
Sachiko Isono4, and Toshiaki Nitatori2
1Radiology, Kyorin University Faculty of
Medicine, Mitaka-shi, Tokyo, Japan, 2Department
of Radiology, Kyorin University, Mitaka-shi, Tokyou,
Japan,3MRI, Toshiba Medical Reser, Vernon
Hills, IL, 4MRI,
Toshiba Medical Systems Corp, Otawara, Tochigi
Non-contrast-enhanced MRA of the renal arteries with
Time-SLIP using a 3-T MRI system incorporating
Multi-phase Transmission was compared with that using a
1.5-T MRI system. In the 3-T system, the BBTI value at
which the renal arteries were visualized out to their
peripheral branches matched the BBTI at which the signal
of the renal parenchyma reached the null point. The 3-T
system incorporating Multi-phase Transmission was found
to have superior visualization capabilities as compared
to the 1.5-T system and was therefore judged to be of
greater clinical usefulness.
|
3908. |
72 |
Renal Transplant:
Nonenhanced Magnetic Resonance Angiography with
Quiescent-Interval Single-Shot
Pegah Entezari1, Mauricio S Galizia1,
Christopher Glielmi2, Jeremy Collins1,
Michael Markl1, Robert R Edelman3,
and James C Carr1
1Department of Radiology, Northwestern
University-Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL,
United States, 2Cardiovascular
MR R&D, Siemens Healthcare, Chicago, IL, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, NorthShore University HealthSystem,
Evanston, IL, United States
Patients with renal transplants were images with two
non-enhanced MRA techniques: quiescent-interval
single-shot (QISS) and steady-state free precession (SSFP)
with inversion recovery. Image quality and diagnostic
findings were recorded by two observers. There were no
significant differences in terms of image quality
between the methods. Both observers had one misdiagnosis
each using the SSFP MRA as gold standard. QISS is a
potential alternative for the imaging of patients with
renal transplants when there is insufficient blood flow.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
|
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
13:30 - 14:30 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3909.
|
73 |
Acceleration techniques
for phase contrast flow quantification: a deal with the
Devil?
Francesco Santini1
1Division of Radiological Physics - Institute
of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University of Basel
Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Spatiotemporal acceleration techniques, while allowing
high acceleration factors, increase the temporal
footprint of each image, because every reconstructed
frame contains information from neighboring images. In
particular, higher framerates can give the illusion of
better accuracy, while in fact leaving the actual
information content unchanged. The purpose of this work
is to recall the basic concepts of signal sampling and
MRI acceleration applied to flow imaging, and to provide
a general guideline to compare different
acquisition/reconstruction methods in order to obtain
the most efficient acquisition.
|
3910. |
74 |
Reduction of Eddy
Current-Induced Velocity Offsets in Phase Contrast MRI
Matthew J. Middione1,2, and Daniel B. Ennis1,2
1Department of Radiological Sciences,
University of California, Los Angeles, CA, United
States, 2Biomedical
Physics Interdepartmental Program, University of
California, Los Angeles, CA, United States
Phase contrast MRI (PC-MRI) is subject to numerous
sources of error including eddy currents, which
decreases both quantitative accuracy and clinical
confidence in the reported measures. A recently proposed
PC-MRI protocol minimizes flow measurement errors
arising from chemical shift effects. Herein we
demonstrate that this same protocol reduces eddy
current-induced velocity offsets to clinically
acceptable levels (<0.6cm/s) for the ascending aorta and
right and left pulmonary arteries as demonstrated in
N=10 healthy subjects. Reductions for the pulmonary
artery are also seen. The proposed PC-MRI protocol
improves the accuracy and robustness of PC-MRI by
reducing two significant sources of error.
|
3911. |
75 |
Accurate method for
measuring pulmonary artery pulse wave velocity by magnetic
resonance imaging – mathematical proof and applications
El-Sayed H Ibrahim1
1Department of Radiology, University of
Florida, Jacksonville, FL, United States
A new method (flow-time-area’(QTA)) is introduced for
accurately measuring pulse wave velocity (PWV) in the
pulmonary artery (PA). The method is based on the flow
area(QA) method, yet is more robust to measurement
errors as mathematically proved and demonstrated in a
study on PA hypertension (PAH) patients and volunteers.
Statistical analysis was conducted to compare the two
methods under different operating conditions. The
results were validated against standard non-MRI
measurements in PAH. The QTA method always results in
smaller or (at most) equal PWV errors than QA.
Experimental results showed significant differences
between the two methods in favor of QTA.
|
3912. |
76 |
In-vivo distortion of
through-plane flow by small off-resonance error in spiral
phase-contrast imaging
Iain T Pierce1,2, Peter D Gatehouse1,2,
and David N Firmin1,2
1NHLI, Imperial College London, London,
United Kingdom, 2CMR
Unit, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom
Spiral readouts are used due to their efficient coverage
of k-space, but longer durations increase sensitivity to
off-resonance. For spiral through-plane flow imaging,
two sources of phase curvature over the vessel
cross-section, velocity encoding and frequency
off-resonance, can interact in a complex manner and
cause in-vivo contraction and dilation artefacts of the
vessel, distorting the velocity distribution and the
peak velocity measurement.
|
3913. |
77 |
Quantification of Pulse
Wave Velocity From Phase-Contrast MRI Data Using Fourier
Analysis
Nikhil Jha1, Wei Zha1, Himanshu
Gupta2, Steven Lloyd2, and Thomas
S Denney1
1Auburn University, Auburn, AL, United
States, 2University
of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, United States
Currently pulse wave velocity (PWV) is measured using
the transit time between two corresponding points in
respective velocity profiles. The coarse temporal
resolution of PC-MRI and change in waveform shape make
it difficult to calculate PWV reliably. A frequency
domain approach to the measurement of transit time is
presented where the Fourier transform of the velocity
profiles are taken. The quotient of the two transforms
have a linear phase characteristic where the slope is a
function of transit time. This method was implemented
and found to be more robust in response to changes in
the measured velocity wave.
|
3914. |
78 |
Evaluation of Wall Shear
Stress in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats by Phase-Contrast
MRI
Shin-Lei Peng1, Hsu-Hsia Peng1,
Tao-Chieh Yang2, Jee-Ching Hsu3,
Yi-Chun Wu4, and Fu-Nien Wang1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering and
Environmental Sciences, National Tsing Hua University,
HsinChu, Taiwan, 2Department
of Neurosurgy, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, TaoYuan,
Taiwan, 3Department
of Anesthesiology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital,
TaoYuan, Taiwan, 4Molecular
Imaging Center, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, TaoYuan,
Taiwan
Wall shear stress (WSS) derived from phase-contrast MRI
(PC-MRI), has been used to provide insights into the
blood rheology. The vessels with atherosclerosis are of
low WSS, and the hypertension is one of the risk factors
for developing atherosclerosis. This study demonstrated
the feasibility of WSS measurements in a rat model. The
lower WSS in the bifurcation of common carotid artery (CCA)
of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) was measured
when compared to the middle level of CCA. Furthermore,
higher WSS was observed in the normotensive Wistar Kyoto
(WKY) rats. It could be a potential technique for
longitudinal research on atherosclerosis.
|
3915. |
79 |
Feasibility of 4D Flow MRI
of the Brain with y-z Radial Sampling and k-t SENSE:
Comparison with 4D Flow MRI using SENSE
Tetsuro Sekine1, Yasuo Amano1, Ryo
Takagi1, Yuriko Suzuki2, and
Shinichiro Kumita1
1Radiology, Nippon Medical School, Tokyo,
Japan, 2Philips
Electronics Japan
4D Flow MRI velocity mapping, generated from
time-resolved 3D phase-contrast imaging data, is
available for the assessment of complicated flow pattern
in cerebrovascular diseases. The main disadvantage of 4D
Flow MRI is its lengthy scan time. We assessed the
feasibility of@4D Flow MRI combined with two
acceleration techniques, y-z radial sampling and k-t
SENSE, by comparing with the standard 4D Flow MRI using
SENSE. Y-z radial sampling was feasible for the
quantification of peak systolic velocity and flow
volume, whereas k-t SENSE was feasible for the 4D flow
visualization.
|
3916. |
80 |
Evaluating portal venous
hemodynamics with 4D flow: how essential is the temporal
dimension?
Benjamin R Landgraf1, Kevin M Johnson2,
Christopher Francois1, Alejandro Roldan1,
Oliver Wieben2, and Scott Reeder1,2
1Radiology, University of Wisconsin -
Madison, Madison, Wisconsin (WI), United States, 2Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison,
Wisconsin (WI), United States
4D flow MRI has been shown effective in the assessment
of the hemodynamics and morphology in portal
hypertension. Rapid imaging approaches such as PCVIPR
offer complete abdominal coverage with high spatial and
temporal resolution in short scan times. Further
reductions in scan time may be possible by exploiting
the non-pulsatile nature of portal venous blood flow by
time-averaging flow. The purpose of this study was to
compare the accuracy of time-averaged versus
time-resolved 4D flow MRI and to determine the degree of
scan time reduction that can be achieved while
maintaining high quality angiograms and accurate
quantification of blood flow.
|
3917. |
81 |
Modeling and Simulation
Framework for Hemodynamic Assessment of Aortic Coarctation
Patients
Kristof Ralovich1,2, Viorel Mihalef2,
Puneet Sharma2, Lucian Itu3, Dime
Vitanovski2, Razvan Ionasec2,
Michael Suehling2, Allen Everett4,
Giacomo Pongiglione5, Dorin Comaniciu2,
and Nassir Navab1
1Computer Aided Medical Procedures, TU
Munich, Munich, Germany, 2Siemens
Corporate Research, Princeton, New Jersey, United
States,3Universitatea Transilvania, Brasov,
Romania, 4Johns
Hopkins University, 5Ospedale
Pediatrico Bambino Gesu, Rome, Italy
We present an integrated modeling and simulation
framework for hemodynamic analysis of coarctation
patients (post-stenting). 3D anatomical and 2D PC-MRI
images are automatically processed to obtain the
patient-specific anatomy and flow measurements, which
are then used for performing patient-specific
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) simulations. A novel
coupling of axi-symmetric 1D and 3D CFD unsteady
simulations provides physiological boundary conditions
for the overall simulation framework. As a first
validation study, we compared the simulated and PC-MRI
distal aortic flow rate in six patients. The promising
initial results reiterate the potential of CFD
simulations to provide assessment of post operative
hemodynamics.
|
3918. |
82 |
Quantification of net
vorticity evolution in the left atrium
Prasanta Pal1, Ziheng Zhang1, Ben
A. Lin2, Mitchel Stacy2, Donald
Dione2, Albert J. Sinusas2, and
Smita Sampath1
1Diagnostic Radiology, Yale University School
of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States, 2Internal
Medicine Cardiology, Yale University School of Medicine,
New Haven, Connecticut, United States
We have developed an EPI-based high temporal resolution
phase contrast MR imaging pulse sequence. This sequence
was used to acquire LA velocity data in two orthogonal
directions on a 4-chamber slice. The velocity data with
the application of appropriate data filters was used to
quantify vorticity patterns in the left atrium (LA). We
observed significant differences between the net
vorticity of normal pigs and ~8 day post myocardial
infarct pigs. We hypothesize that alterations in
vorticity patterns may provide a quantitative tool to
assess early changes in atrial function.
|
3919. |
83 |
Cerebral Cine PC-MRI to
Investigate Brain Hemodynamic Of Neonates With Transposition
Of The Great Arteries Before And After Cardiopulmonary
Bypass Surgery.
Malek I Makki1, Olivier Baledent2,
Hitendu Dave3, Walter Knirsch4,
Bea Latal5, Ianina Scheer6, and
Cornelia Hagmann7
1MRI Research Center, University Chidlren
Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland, 2Imagerie
Medicale, CHU Nord Amiens, France, 3Congenital
Cardiovascular Surgery, University Children Hospital
Zurich, 4Cardiology,
University Children Hospital Zurich, 5Child
Development, University Children Hospital Zurich,6Diagnostic
Imaging, University Children Hospital - Zurich, 7Neonatalogy,
University Hospital Zurich
We applied 2D cine PC-MRI to investigate brain
hemodynamic of 4 term neonates with TGA before and after
CPB surgery along with 4 age-matched healthy neonates.
Flows were bilaterally measured in the internal carotid,
vertebral arteries and jugular veins and we combined
left and right measures. We observed striking
differences in the shape and peak values of the
pre-surgical group compared to healthy controls both in
systolic and diastolic period. We also reported
significant changes in the arterio-venous flows of these
patients following CPB surgery where the peak values at
both systole and diastole resembled that of healthy
controls.
|
3920. |
84 |
Magnetic resonance
assessment of the changes associated with portal
hypertension in a rat model of portal vein stenosis
Philippe Garteiser1, Pierre-Emmanuel Rautou1,2,
Sabrina Doblas1, Eric Frampas3,
Safi Dokmak2, Richard Moreau1,
Dominique Valla1,2, Ralph Sinkus1,
Valerie Vilgrain3, and Bernard E Van Beers3
1CRB3 U773 Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne
Paris Cite, INSERM, Paris, 75018, France, 2Service
of Hepatology, Hopital Beaujon, Clichy, France,3Service
of Radiology, Hopital Beaujon, Clichy, France
Portal hypertension is the most important complication
of chronic liver diseases and is a leading cause of
mortality and liver transplantation worldwide. Yet
reliable animal models are still lacking despite an
important demand for a robust method enabling
pharmacological tests. Here we report the use of Fourier
flow MRI in the establishment of a robust rat model of
portal hypertension.
|
3921. |
85 |
Ferumoxytol Enhanced 2D &
3D Phase Contrast MRI in dialysis fistulas
Monica Sigovan1, Gabriel Acevedo-Bolton1,
Petter Dyverfeldt1, Christopher Owens2,
and David Saloner1
1Radiology, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2Vascular
Surgery, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States
Ferumoxytol is a very promising MRI contrast agent for
medical applications in which Gadolinium agents are
contra-indicated. The quality of Phase Contrast MR
acquisitions can be improved with the use of Gd. In
comparison, Ferumoxytol’s higher r2* relaxivity could
potentially induce strong intravoxel dephasing leading
to errors in flow measurements. The objective was to
evaluate ferumoxytol’s effect on 2D and 3D PC-MR flow
imaging by simulations, in vitro and in vivo imaging. We
showed that if administered in relatively low
concentrations, ferumoxytol does not affect the PC-MRI
flow measurements. However, the velocity dependent
effect on SNR needs to be considered.
|
3922. |
86 |
Assessment of Blood Flow
Hemodynamics of Liver Cirrhosis Patients after Treatment
with a TIPS Stent-graft using a flow-sensitive 4D MRI
Imaging at 3 Tesla
Zoran Stankovic1, Zoltan Csatari1,
Bernd Jung1, Peter Deibert2,
Elisabeth Panther2, Wulf Euringer1,
Julia Geiger1, Wolfgang Kreisel2,
Mathias Langer1, and Michael Markl3
1Radiology and Medical Physics, University
Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Ba.-Wü., Germany, 2Gastroenterology,
University Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Ba.-Wü.,
Germany, 3Departments
of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern
University, Chicago, Illinois, United States
Flow-sensitive 4D MRI provides complete volumetric and
temporal coverage of hepatic venous and arterial
hemodynamics in liver cirrhosis patients before and
after TIPS-stent-graft implantation. Flow-sensitive 4D
MRI provided a complete picture of pre- and
post-interventional hepatic hemodynamics with additional
information compared to Doppler US in liver cirrhosis
after TIPS-stent-graft implantation. TIPS-stent-graft
implantation resulted in altered hemodynamics and
increased velocities and flow volume in the venous as
well as hepatic arterial system. Compared to Doppler
Ultrasound, maximum and mean velocities and vessel area
tended to be lower in MRI while flow volume, resistance
and pulsatility indices were similar.
|
3923. |
87 |
Aortic Pulse Wave Velocity
Evaluation in Normals and Heart Failure Patients
Yi Wang1,2, Jie J Cao1,3, Yang
Cheng1, and Nathaniel Reichek1,3
1St. Francis Hospital, Roslyn, NY, United
States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, SUNY Stony Brook, Stony Brook, NY, United
States, 3Cardiology,
SUNY Stony Brook
Aortic pulse wave velocity is altered by normal aging,
as well as vessel wall pathology. We evaluated aortic
compliance and its relationship to age in normals and
patients with heart failure.
|
3924. |
88 |
Wavelet-Based Evaluation
for the Thoracic Aorta Stiffness from CINE-MR Images
Abubakr El-Tahir1, Alain Lalande1,
Marie Xavier1, Alexandre Cochet1,
Nicolas Vignon1, Paul M. Walker1,
Jean-Eric Wolf1, and François Brunotte1
1LE2I, UMR CNRS 5158, Dijon, Burgundy, France
A new method is proposed to evaluate the aortic
stiffness and to detect abnormalities in its condition.
The methods relies on cine MR images to monitor the
aortic vessel and to observe the evolution of its cross
sectional area at a given site over time. The variation
of the area is then analyzed using the wavelet
decomposition. The wavelet spectrum is used to classify
patients with aortic disorders from healthy subjects.
This method was tested on patients with Marfan syndrome
and MYH11 mutation. Promising results was obtained in
comparison with the commonly used stiffness measurements
like compliance and pulse-wave-velocity.
|
3925. |
89 |
Pulmonary Artery 4D Flow
MRI in Normal Volunteers and Pulmonary Hypertension
Pegah Entezari1, Susanne Schnell1,
Octavia Biris1, Jeremy D Collins1,
Maria Carr1, Marie Wasielewski1,
Jennifer McDonald1, Timothy J. Carroll1,2,
James Carr1, and Michael Markl1,2
1Dept. of Radiology, Northwestern University,
Chicago, Illinois, United States, 2Biomedical
Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston,
Illinois, United States
This study evaluates the feasibility of 4D flow MRI for
the assessment of 3D pulmonary flow characteristics in
normal and hypertensive pulmonary arteries. The results
of this pilot study demonstrate the feasibility of 4D
flow MRI for the assessment of pulmonary flow
characteristics and the ability to detect changes in PA
flow compared to normal controls. Noticeably, patients
with similar clinical presentation showed markedly
different pulmonary 3D flow patterns indicating the
potential of the methods to detect changes in pulmonary
hemodynamics that may permit an improved
characterization of the individual PAH severity.
|
3926. |
90 |
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
Causes Hemodynamic Abnormalities in the Iliac Arteries
Mamoru Takahashi1, Yasuo Takehara2,
Haruo Isoda3, Naoki Ooishi2,
Masaki Terada4, Tetsuya Wakayama5,
Atsushi Nozaki5, Toshiyuki Shimizu6,
Marcus Alley7, Naoki Uno2,
Norihiko Siiya2, Norihiro Tooyama8,
Katsutoshi Ichijo8, and Harumi Sakahara2
1Seirei Mikatahara General Hospital,
Hamamatsu, Shizuoka, Japan, 2Hamamatsu
University School of Medicine, 3Nagoya
University School of Health Sciences, 4Iwata
City Hosipital, 5GE
Helthcare Japan, 6R's
Tech Co, 7Stanford
University School of Medicine, 8Seirei
Mikatahara General Hospital
Low wall shear stress is known to cause atherosclerosis
in the arterial wall. Hemodynamic patterns of the iliac
arteries were assessed in two groups (i.e. dilated and
undilated abdominal aorta) in terms of the patterns of
streamlines and mean values of wall shear stress (WSS).
As a result, abnormal flow dynamics such as vortex
and/or turbulent flow occur in the abdominal aortic
aneurysm (AAA) also affected the hemodynamics in the
downstream iliac arteries, which reduced their WSSs.
|
3927. |
91 |
Hemodynamic changes during
arterio-venous fistula maturation. An MRI follow-up
Monica Sigovan 1, Vitaliy Rayz 1,
Warren Gasper 2, Christopher Owens 2,
and David Saloner 1
1Radiology, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United
States, 2Vascular
Surgery, UCSF, San Francisco, CA, United States
|
3928. |
92 |
Quantification of 3D
hemodynamics in large and giant intracranial aneurysms
Susanne Schnell1, Sameer A. Ansari2,
Parmede Vakil1, Michael C. Hurley1,
Bernard R. Bendok2, Hunt Batjer2,
Timothy J. Carroll1,3, James Carr1,
and Michael Markl1,3
1Dept. of Radiology, Northwestern University,
Chicago, Illinois, United States, 2Dept.
of Neurological Surgery, Northwestern University,
Chicago, Illinois, United States, 3Biomedical
Engineering, Northwestern University, Evanston,
Illinois, United States
In patients with large and giant intracranial aneurysms,
4D-Flow-MRI was employed to characterize hemodynamics,
WSS and vorticity patterns and their association with
aneurysm location and morphology. Two distinct groups
could be identified by comparing mean WSS and vorticity.
Group 1 was characterized by saccular/spherical
aneurysms with narrow high-flow channels, high and
heterogeneous WSS and vorticity. Group 2 consisted of
fusiform aneurysms with slow-flow regions and hardly
defined flow channels as well as with low more
homogeneous WSS and vorticity. Future longitudinal
studies based on the measurement, analysis and
visualization of intracranial aneurysms using
4D-Flow-MRI have the potential to correlate disease
progression with regional hemodynamics; and may thus;
improve risk stratification and interventional or
surgical treatment planning.
|
3929. |
93 |
Increased Growth with
Eccentricity: 4D Flow evaluation of valve-related aortic
disease
S. Jarrett Wrenn1, Monica Sigovan1,
and Michael Hope1
1Department of Radiology and Biomedical
Imaging, University of California, San Francisco, San
Francisco, California, United States
Bicuspid aortic valve is a relatively common congenital
anomaly and is associated with ascending aortic
aneurysm. 4D Flow MRI has previously demonstrated unique
systolic flow patterns in bicuspid valve patients. Here
we examined ascending aorta growth rates in patients
with bicuspid aortic valves and in tricuspid aortic
valve controls, who were all studied with 4D Flow MRI.
Abnormal flow patterns, assessed both qualitatively and
quantitatively, correlated with more rapid ascending
aortic growth. This suggests that 4D Flow MRI could be
used to risk stratify bicuspid aortic valve patients
with regards to the development of ascending aortic
aneurysm.
|
3930. |
94 |
Evaluation of 3D Blood
Flow Patterns and Wall Shear Stress in the Normal and
Dilated Thoracic Aorta using flow-sensitive 4D MRI.
Jonas Buerk1, Zoran Stankovic1,
Philipp Blanke1, Alex Barker1,
Maximiliam Russe1, Julia Geiger1,
Mathias Langer1, and Michael Markl2
1Radiology and Medical Physics, University
Hospital, Freiburg, Germany, 2Radiology
and Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University,
Chicago, USA
Flow-sensitive 3-dimensional MRI was successfully used
to visualize different flow patterns in aneurysms of the
ascending aorta. 33 aneurysm patients, 15 age matched
normal controls and 15 healthy volunteers were examined.
The study shows that there is a significant relationship
between vessel diameter in the AAo, AAo/DAo diameter
ratio and the incidence and strength of irregular blood
flow and altered vessel wall parameters. Our results
contribute to our understanding of the mechanism
involved in the development of ascending aneurysms.
However, longitudinal follow-up studies are needed to
correlate aneurysm growth rate or rupture risk with
characteristics of flow pattern alterations noted in
this study.
|
3931.
|
95 |
In Vivo Four-Dimensional
Flow Analysis of Mechanically Assisted Ischemic
Cardiomyopathy
Jeremy R. McGarvey1,2, Walter R.T. Witschey2,3,
Kevin J. Koomalsingh2, Norihiro Kondo2,
Manabu Takebe2, Gerald A Zsido2,
Melissa M. Levack2, Christen M. Dillard2,
Kristina Lau2, Chun Xu2, Francisco
Contijoch2, Alexander J. Barker4,
Michael Markl5, Joseph H. Gorman1,2,
Robert C. Gorman1,2, and James J. Pilla2,3
1Department of Surgery, University of
Pennsylvania Health System, Philadelphia, PA, United
States, 2Gorman
Cardiovascular Research Lab, Harrison Department of
Surgical Research, Glenolden, PA, United States, 3Department
of Radiology, University of Pennsylvania Health System,
Philadelphia, PA, United States, 4Department
of Radiology, University Medical Center Freiburg,
Freiburg, Germany, 5Department
of Radiology, Northwestern University School of
Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States
Development of ischemic cardiomyopathy is complex
pathophysiologic process that is both challenging to
describe and treat. Ischemic insult results in an
increase in the zero-pressure volume (Vo) and residual
volume, as defined by pressure-volume relationships and
flow-sensitive 4D MRI respectively. A directed therapy
that restores the V0 of the infarcted area has yet to be
introduced or evaluated. We describe the flow changes
associated with a novel epicardial active assist device.
Using 4D flow-sensitive MRI, we have found that both
systolic and diastolic flow is increased in the area
adjacent to the infarct while being assisted, when
compared to baseline.
|
3932.
|
96 |
Wall Morphology,
Hemodynamics and Wall Shear Stress in Peripheral Arterial
Disease
Mauricio S Galizia1, Jennifer McDonald1,
Marie Wasielewski1, Maria Carr1,
Mary McDermott2,3, James C Carr1,
and Michael Markl1,4
1Department of Radiology, Northwestern
University-Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL,
United States, 2Department
of Preventive Medicine, Northwestern University-Feinberg
School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States, 3Department
of Internal Medicine, Northwestern University-Feinberg
School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, United States, 4Department
of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University,
Chicago, IL, United States
Twenty-three patients with peripheral artery disease
were imaged with a multi-contrast plaque imaging
protocol and with phase-contrast MRA. The plaque images
were classified as normal or abnormal and divided in
categories. Phase-contrast images were manually
segmented and various flow parameters were calculated.
Patients with plaques had lower total blood flow, peak
wall shear stress (WSS), and average WSS. This technique
has the potential to being able to investigate a direct
connection between the presence and type of
atherosclerotic plaques and changes in wall shear
stress.
|
|
|
Electronic
Poster Session - Cardiovascular |
|
Cardiovascular MRI - General
Click on
to view
the abstract pdf and click on
to view the
video presentation. (Not all presentations are available.)
Wednesday 9 May 2012
Exhibition Hall |
14:30 - 15:30 |
|
|
|
Computer # |
|
3933. |
73 |
Non-Contrast Enhanced
Renal Artery Angiography with a Respiratory Triggered 3D
balanced SSFP Sequence: Comparison of Optimized Repetitive
Arterial or Vein Labeling (RAVEL) Method with and without
T2prep
Kosuke Morita1, Tomohiro Namimoto2,
Masanori Komi3, Masahiro Hashida3,
Yasuyuki Yamashita2, and Yoshiaki Komori4
1Diagnostic Radiology, Graduate School of
Medical Sciences, Kumamoto University, kumamoto, 1-1-1
honjo, Japan, 2Diagnostic
Radiology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Kumamoto
University, 3Radiology,
Kumamoto University, 4Philips
Electronics Japan
The purpose of our study was to optimize imaging
parameters of the respiratory-triggered Repetitive
Arterial or VEin Labeling (RAVEL) method with selective
inversion pulse for the renal arteries and to apply
optimized non-contrast MR renal angiography for normal
volunteers. Moreover, we evaluated the utility of T2prep
to suppress a background signal for the RAVEL method.Non-contrast
MRA using the respiratory-triggered RAVEL with 3D
balanced SSFP was available to visualize renal arteries
especially when the FA and TI were optimized.
Furthermore, T2prep improves vessel/background contrast
and image quality of the aorta and renal artery without
the use of contrast media.
|
3934. |
74 |
A New Approach for
Time-Resolved Phase Contrast MRA
Jelena Bock1, Hans Burkhardt2, and
Michael Markl3
1Radiology, Medical Physics, University
Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, 2Computer
Science, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany,3Radiology
and Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University,
Chicago, United States
In this study we present results for extraction of
time-resolved 3D PC-MR angiography from PC-MRI data with
3-directional velocity encoding using fully automated
feature based fuzzy clustering for dynamic aortic lumen
segmentation. This approach was applied and evaluated in
11 healthy subjects and 12 patients with different
cardiovascular pathologies. In all data, time-resolved
PC-MRA demonstrated good vessel depiction in peak
systolic time frames, with incomplete vessel extraction
in early systole and diastole. Different pathologies had
no influence on segmentation quality. In comparison to
manual segmentation, this approach underestimated flow
parameters; however, compared with rigid segmentation,
flow parameters were determined more accurately.
|
3935. |
75 |
Automated model-based
assessment of the aortic root for optimal planning of TAVI
procedures using CMRI – A comparison with manual
measurements
Sabine Mollus1, Maximilian Pietsch1,
Irina Waechter-Stehle2, Yang-Chul Boering3,
Meike Schmidt3, Jason Foerst3,
Sebastian Gruenig3, Mirja Neizel3,
Burkhard Sievers3, Patric Kroepil4,
Juergen Weese2, Jan Balzer3, and
Malte Kelm3
1Philips Research, Aachen, Germany, 2Philips
Research, Hamburg, Germany, 3Clinic
for Cardiology, Pneumology and Angiology, University
Hospital Duesseldorf, Germany, 4Department
of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, University
Hospital Duesseldorf, Germany
TAVI is a catheter-based intervention for high-risk
patients with severe aortic valve stenosis. It is based
on the replacement of the non-functioning valve by a
stent-based prosthesis. Comprehensive, (MR)
imaging-based planning is essential for TAVI device
selection. Methods for automatic aortic valve planimetry
can improve manual evaluations. For this purpose, we
developed a MR-based model of the relevant anatomy. In
this study, we compare model-based with manual
measurements, evaluate the inter-operator variability
and perform inter-modality comparisons between MR and
CT. The results show that model-based automated aortic
root measurements in MR correlate well with manual
evaluations and with CT-based measurements. Thus,
geometrical modelling proves to be an accurate and
innovative technique for automatic aortic root
planimetry.
|
3936. |
76 |
Automated T2* Mapping with
Susceptibility Removal for the Assessment of Cardiac Iron
Content
Brian A. Taylor1, Ralf B. Loeffler1,
Ruitian Song1, Mary E. McCarville1,
Jane S. Hankins2, and Claudia M. Hillenbrand1
1Radiological Sciences, St. Jude Children's
Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, United States, 2Hematology,
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis,
Tennessee, United States
Simultaneous T2* and field maps are calculated using an
autoregressive moving average (ARMA) model on a cardiac
multi-gradient echo acquisition. By using the field map,
areas of high susceptibility are identified and removed
for T2* quantification in the left ventricle. This can
aid in precise T2* mapping for improved cardiac iron
concentration assessment.
|
3937. |
77 |
COMPARISON OF METHODS FOR
THE ANALYSIS OF PHASE SENSITIVE INVERSION RECOVERY IMAGES IN
THE ASSESSMENT OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION
Laura Fernandez-de-Manuel1,2, Haiyan Ding1,3,
Maria J. Ledesma Carbayo2, Elliot McVeigh1,
Andres Santos2, Aravindan Kolandaivelu4,
and Daniel A. Herzka1
1Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United
States, 2Biomedical
Image Technologies Lab., ETSI Telecomunicacion,
Universidad Politecnica de Madrid and CIBER-BBN, Madrid,
Spain, 3Department
of Biomedical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing,
China, 4Department
of Medicine, Cardiology, Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States
Two-dimensional PSIR is a well established method of
delineating scar in subjects with MI. Quantification of
MI has been traditionally based on a threshold of more
than 2 standard deviations (+2SD) above the mean of
normal myocardial intensity. Newer alternative
approaches with improved performance have yet to be
applied to 3D PSIR imaging. In this work we compare
different scar segmentation methods applied to a dataset
of high-resolution 2D and 3D PSIR images from a swine
model of MI. Proposed methods are based on Gaussian
Mixture Model fitting and the Otsu algorithm, and are
compared to the standard (+2SD).
|
3938. |
78 |
Respiratory Triggered
Retrospectively Cardiac Gated Cine Steady-State Free
Precession (SSFP) Imaging
Amol Pednekar1, Ramkumar Krishnamurthy2,
Claudio Arena3, Raja Muthupillai3,
Benjamin Cheong3, and Debra Dees3
1MR Clinical Science, Philips HealthCare,
Houston, TX, United States, 2BioEngineering,
Rice University, Houston, Texas, United States, 3Radiology,
St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, Houston, Texas, United
States
We propose a free breathing respiratory triggered
multi-shot cardiac cine SSFP technique with a drive to
steady state at each expiration phase and retrospective
cardiac gating. Our initial evaluation in normal
subjects shows that slice-by-slice LV volumes estimated
using this free breathing technique are comparable to
the LV volumes obtained using conventional, breath-hold
cardiac cine SSFP techniques. The combination of
respiratory triggering, multi-shot acquisition, and
retrospective cardiac gating may make this approach
particularly useful in patients with severely
compromised breath holding capability and moderate
arrhythmia. Further allowing high spatial and/or
temporal resolution cardiac cine imaging.
|
3939. |
79 |
Cardiac magnetic resonance
in patients with antiarrhythmic devices .Image quality and
diagnostic utility study.
Begoña Igual-Muñoz1, Vicente Martinez-Sanjuan2,
JORDI ESTORNELL3, JOSE MONMENEU3,
PILAR LOPEZ-LEREU3, ALICIA MACEIRA3,
and Maria Jose Sancho-Tello4
1Cardiac image unit, ERESA, valencia,
valencia, Spain, 2radiology,
ERESA, valencia, valencia, 3TAC-RM,
ERESA-HGUV, VALENCIA, VALENCIA, Spain,4Cardiology,
Hospital universitari i politecnic la FE, Valencia,
Valencia, Spain
Recent studies suggest that cardiovascular magnetic
resonance (CMR) could be carried out in those patients
with implanted antiarrhythmic devices (AAD), such as
pacemakers (PM) or implantable
cardioverter-defibrillators (ICD), with minimum risk
both for the patient and for the AAD. CMR in this
setting can be technically demanding and the signal loss
and magnetic field inhomogeneity induced by the AAD may
limit the diagnostic yield of this imaging technique.
The aim of this study was 1) to assess the safety and
diagnostic usefulness of CMR in patients with AAD, 2) to
analyse which factors may affect image quality in these
scans.
|
3940. |
80 |
Diffusion tensor magnetic
resonance imaging for the human heart with free breathing
Yuqing Huang1, Cong Zhao1, Jing An1,
Zhiguo Sun1, and Dehe Weng1
1Siemens Shenzhen Magnetic Resonance Co.
Ltd., Shenzhen, Guangdong, China
A STEAM single shot EPI sequence with two ECG triggers
and respiratory motion correction was applied on the
heart of a healthy volunteer to detect the cardiac fibre
tracts. This method provides a useful tool to depict the
myocardial structure under free breathing and may help
us understand structural correlates of functional
remodeling after heart disease.
|
3941. |
81 |
Evaluation of the
relationship between right ventricle mechanics and pulmonary
artery vessel and flow dynamics in pulmonary artery
hypertension by MRI
El-Sayed H Ibrahim1, and Abubakr A Bajwa2
1Department of Radiology, University of
Florida, Jacksonville, FL, United States, 2Department
of Medicine, University of Florida, Jacksonville, FL,
United States
This study investigates the relationships between
right-ventricle (RV)-related and pulmonary-artery
(PA)-related parameters using MRI. A comprehensive MRI
exam was developed for evaluating RV and PA, and tested
on 25 PA hypertension(PAH) patients. Standard non-MRI
measurements were collected. Comprehensive statistical
analysis was conducted to study relationships between
parameters, parameters’ significance, and data
redundancy and reduction. The results showed strong
correlations between most RV and PA parameters; and
between most MRI parameters and PA pressure. There were
redundancies between some within-group parameters. In
conclusion, RV and PA are coupled and negatively
affected in PAH. Both entities should be evaluated and
interpreted together.
|
3942. |
82 |
Cardiac MR Imaging and
Technology Assessment: A randomized prospective comparison
of Robotic Assisted versus Standard Catheter AF ablation
Aruna Arujuna1,2, Rashed Karim1,
Aldo Rinaldi1,2, Michael Cooklin2,
Mark O'Neill1,2, Kawal Rhode1,
Tobias Schaeffter1, Jaswinder Gill1,2,
and Reza Razavi1,2
1Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering,
King's College London, London, London, United Kingdom, 2Cardiology
Department, Guy's &St Thomas' Hospital, London, London,
United Kingdom
The recent few years has seen the emerging role of
Cardiac MR Imaging in Atrial Fibrillation. In
particular, delayed enhancement imaging following
catheter ablation has allowed for areas within the left
atrium following tissue injury to be visualized. There
is a good correlation between scar quantification and
clinical outcome. In this study we performed a
randomized control clinical study using CMR to assess a
novel robotic catheter ablating navjgation system and
correlated CMR data to clinical outcomes.
|
3943. |
83 |
Myocardial T2* Cut-Off
Values Determined by Gaussian Mixtures Models
Taigang He1,2, Yanqiu Feng3,
Rongrong Liu4, John-Paul Carpenter1,
Andrew Jabbour1, Yongrong lai4,
Dudley Pennell1, and David Firmin1,2
1CMR Unit, Royal Brompton Hospital, London,
United Kingdom, 2NHLI,
Imperial College, London, United Kingdom, 3School
of Biomedical Engineering, Sourthern Medical University,
China, 4Department
of Hematology, The first affiliated Hospital of Guangxi
Medical University, China
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) T2* can provide
a non-invasive means of measuring tissue iron in the
heart. We have found that T2*< 20ms represents iron
overload in the heart, and that T2*<10ms predicts risk
of heart faliure in patients with thalassemia major. In
this study, we aimed at clustering patients
automatically into normal and abnormal groups by using
Gaussian mixture models. This study confirms
statistically that T2* is a reliable tool for screening
patients with iron overload. The results agree well with
T2* cut-off value of 20ms and 10ms commonly used in
clinical practice.
|
3944. |
84 |
Correlation Between Left
Atrial Volume Changes And Percentage Scar Measured 3-months
Post RF Ablation
Sathya Vijayakumar1,2, Jerry Walker2,3,
Eugene Kholmovski1,2, Nathan Burgon2,
Alan Morris2, Josh Cates2, Chris J
McGann2,3, and Nassir F Marrouche2,3
1UCAIR, Dept. of Radiology, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, 2CARMA
Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United
States,3Dept. of Cardiology, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
The aim of this study is to evaluate LA volume
measurements using CMR based angiography before and
after left atrial RF ablation therapy as a treatment
strategy for atrial fibrillation (AFIB) and see how it
correlates with the percentage of scar formed 3 months
post ablation. We hypothesize that a greater scar
percentage obtained at 3 months post procedure would
lead to a greater change in volume of the LA (computed
as LA volume measured at different time points,
normalized by the pre-ablation LA volume).
|
3945. |
85 |
Fluorine-19 magnetic
resonance imaging in a mouse model of atherosclerosis
Ruud B van Heeswijk1,2, Maxime Pellegrin3,
Lucia Mazzolai3, Ulrich Flögel4,
Juerg Schwitter5, and Matthias Stuber1,2
1Department of Radiology, University Hospital
(CHUV) and University of Lausanne (UNIL), Lausanne,
Switzerland, 2Center
for Biomedical Imaging (CIBM), Lausanne, Switzerland, 3Service
of Angiology, University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV),
Lausanne, Switzerland, 4Institute
for Cardiovascular Physiology, Heinrich Heine
University, Düsseldorf, Germany, 5Center
for Cardiac Magnetic Resonance and Cardiology Service,
University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV), Lausanne,
Switzerland
A perfluorocarbon emulsion was intravenously
administered in ApoE-knockout mice. Next, fluorine-19
MRI was performed multiple times after injection in
order to quantitatively determine the time course of
perfluorocarbon uptake in regions where atherosclerotic
plaques often occur. The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at
these locations reached an optimum of ~10 at 6-8 days
after injection.
|
3946. |
86 |
Feasibility of 5-Minute
Comprehensive Cardiac MR Examination Using Highly
Accelerated Parallel Imaging and Compressed Sensing
Jian Xu1,2, Li Feng1, Ricardo
Otazo1, Alicia Yang1, Kai Tobias
Block1, Barbara Srichai1, Ruth Lim1,
Kelly Anne Mcgorty1, Joseph Reaume1,
Leon Axel1, Yao Wang3, and Daniel
Sodickson1
1Center for Biomedical Imaging, Radiology,New
York University, New York, NY, United States, 2PolyTechnic
Institute of New York University and Siemens Medical
Solutions USA Inc., New York, NY, United States, 3Polytechnic
Institute of New York University, New York, NY, United
States
The newly developed radial k-t SPARSE SENSE (RASPS)
technique make it possible to further speed up the
acquisition and increase the coverage with high
temporal/spatial resolution without sacrificing SNR. In
this study, we have incorporated dynamic 4D
stack-of-star hybrid radial acquisitions with RASPS into
this 5-min protocol, and the results of comparisons
between RASPS and the previous approach using
GRAPPA/TGRAPPA (PAT) for PERF, CINE and LGE imaging are
presented.
|
3947. |
87 |
Late gadolinium
enhancement imaging with dynamic_TI in the atrial
fibrillation population
Jennifer Keegan1, Peter Gatehouse1,
Sonya Babu-Narayan1, Ricardo Wage1,
Shouvik Haldar2, and David Firmin1,3
1Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, Royal
Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom, 2Cardiology,
Royal Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom,3Imperial
College, London, United Kingdom
An adaptive inversion recovery preparation (dynamic_TI)
was implemented to improve late gadolinium enhancement
imaging in patients with variable RR intervals. Three-D
data were acquired in phantoms and 2D data were acquired
in 5 patients with atrial fibrillation. We demonstrate
that dynamic adaptation of the inversion time for each
cardiac cycle is feasible and can result in less
ghosting, improved nulling of normal myocardium and
increased blood-myocardium contrast-to-noise ratio.
Application to 3D studies in the atrial fibrillation
population should result in fewer inadequate studies.
|
3948. |
88 |
Inflow Inversion Recovery
Steady State Free Precession with Tracking Navigator
Yuji Iwadate1, Anja C.S. Brau2,
Naoyuki Takei1, and Hiroyuki Kabasawa1
1Global Applied Science Laboratory, GE
Healthcare Japan, Hino, Tokyo, Japan, 2Global
Applied Science Laboratory, GE Healthcare, Menlo Park,
CA, United States
Inflow inversion recovery steady state free precession (IFIR
FIESTA) with respiratory triggering is a free-breathing
3D technique for renal MR angiography without contrast
agent. We propose a new respiratory triggered IFIR
FIESTA technique which adds navigator echoes dedicated
for slab tracking to compensate motion at image
acquisition timing. The new method improved delineation
of the arteries with an inconsistent breather whose
end-expiration position varied between imaging periods.
|
3949. |
89 |
MR compatible
Doppler-ultrasound device to trigger the heart frequency in
Cardiac MRI: comparison to ECG
Ulrike Wedegaertner1, Jin Yamamura1,
Björn Schönnagel1, Chressen Much1,
Claus Valett1, and Gerhard Adam1
1Radiology, University Hospital Hamburg-Eppendorf,
Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany
In this study a MR compatible Doppler-ultrasound device
was developed to trigger the heart frequency during
cardiac MR imaging. A commercially available ultrasound
transducer was modified, so that the heart beat could be
recorded during the whole scanning time without any
artifacts. Cardiac MRI was performed using the novel MR
compatible Doppler-ultrasound and conventional ECG for
triggering. There was no difference between both methods
in the evaluation of anatomical structures and
functional information. The MR compatible
Doppler-ultrasound device might be faster and easier in
the application compared to ECG.
|
3950. |
90 |
High spatio-temporal
resolution retrospectively triggered CINE imaging for
measuring diastolic function in mice
Bram F Coolen1, Desiree Abdurrachim1,
Abdallah GA Motaal1, Klaas Nicolay1,
Gustav J Strijkers1, and Jeanine J Prompers1
1Biomedical NMR, Department of Biomedical
Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology,
Eindhoven, Netherlands
This study presents the use of retrospectively triggered
CINE MRI for high spatio-temporal resolution diastolic
function measurements in mice. A temporal resolution < 2
ms could be reached allowing accurate determination of
the E and A diastolic filling rates. Using this
technique, subtle reductions in diastolic function were
observed in diabetic db/db mice compared to non-diabetic
db/+ mice.
|
3951. |
91 |
Fat Imaging and
Suppression Techniques and Applications for Cardiac MRI
Karl K. Vigen1, Christopher J. Francois1,
Scott K. Nagle1,2, Mark L. Schiebler1,
and Scott B. Reeder1,3
1Radiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Madison, WI, United States, 2Medical
Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI,
United States,3Medical Physics, Biomedical
Engineering, and Medicine, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States
Suppression or direct imaging of fat in and around the
heart is potentially useful for imaging several
pathologies. Fat can be suppressed with techniques such
as chemically-selective fat suppression, STIR, and
triple-IR imaging. Direct fat visualization can be
performed with chemically selective water suppression
and chemical shift based water-fat separation methods.
Applications for fat suppression and imaging include
evaluation of chronic myocardial infarct and cardiac
masses as well as improved visualization of structures
such as the coronary arteries and pericardium.
|
3952. |
92 |
Review and Analytical
Discussion of Cardiac Segmentation
Esmeralda Ruiz Pujadas1, and Marco Reisert1
1Radiology, Medical Physics, University
Medical Center Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, Germany
Segmentation of the myocardium gives valuable
information for the the diagnosis and treatment in
cardiac pathologies. Manual segmentation is a very
tedious and time consuming task. Therefore, an automatic
procedure is desirable. But the myocardium detection is
very challenging due to the low heterogeneous and
discontinuous myocardium, the presence of papillary
muscles or the tissues surrounding the myocardium. For
that reason, the problem remains open. We will make an
overview of the methods applied in medical segmentation
and discuss their limitations. After that, an analysis
of the methods will be presented.
|
3953. |
93 |
Pitfalls of using
T2Weighted Imaging for Visualizing Myocardial Edema using
CMR
Ramkumar Krishnamurthy1, Amol Pednekar2,
Benjamin Cheong3, Claudio Arena3,
and Raja Muthupillai3
1BioEngineering, Rice University, Houston,
Texas, United States, 2Philips
HealthCare, 3Radiology,
St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, Houston, Texas, United
States
In this animal study, we study the effect of different
T2 weighting on determination of the area at risk (AAR)
in cardiac black-blood T2 weighted images. After LAD
occlusion in five pigs, black blood images of short axis
at different T2 weightings were obtained and AAR were
determined as regions with signal intensity greater than
‘mean + 2,3 and 4 SD ‘ of remote myocardium. Significant
differences in AAR were observed with different
quantifying metrics as well as T2 weighting. A
significant overlap of absolute T2 values were also
observed.
|
3954. |
94 |
Cardiac MRI in Mice @
11.7T: Comparison of a 4-Element Array Coil and a 2-Element
Cryo Coil
Volker Rasche1,2, Bornstedt Axel1,
and Ina Vernikouskaya1,2
1Experimental Cardiovascular Imaging,
University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany, 2Small
Animal MRI, University of Ulm, Ulm, Germany
High-resolution imaging of the mouse heart is still
limited by the SNR. In this contribution, a cryogenic
2-element coil is evaluated for possible SNR
improvements in the mouse heart. It is shown that in
direct comparison to measurements with a four-element
cardiac array coil an SNR gain between 2.65 and 2.95 can
be realized in the mouse heart.
|
3955. |
95 |
A Local Static Magnetic
Field Confines Implanted Stem Cells in Targeted Regions and
Improves Their Therapeutic Efficacy for Heart Failure
Jian Wang1, Fei Wang2, Bo Xiang2,
Jixian Deng2, Chris Stillwell2,
Hung-Yu Lin2, Marco Gruwel2,
Chun-Te Ko2, Boguslaw Tomanek2,
Mike Sowa2, Tarek Kashour2, Darren
Freed2, Rakesh Arora2, and
Ganghong Tian2
1National Research Council, Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Canada, 2National
Research Council
Cell therapy holds a great promise for curing of various
degenerative diseases, including congestive heart
failure (CHF). However, both animal and human studies
showed very marginal benefits of cell therapy. Lack of
strategies to confine implanted stem cells in a targeted
region may underlie the limited efficacy observed in
cell therapy. This study was to determine whether an
externally applied static magnetic field (SMF) increase
the retention of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO)-labeled
cells in a targeted organ and then improve efficacy of
cell therapy.
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Evaluation of Parallel
Reconstruction Techniques for First-pass Perfusion Imaging
Using Spiral Trajectories
Yang Yang1, Xiao Chen1, Xue Feng1,
Meihan Wang1, Frederick Epstein1,2,
Craig Meyer1,2, and Micheal Salerno2,3
1Biomedical Engineering, University of
Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United States, 2Radiology,
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, United
States,3Medicine, University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, VA, United States
We evaluate the performance of the spiral PILS, SPIRiT
and CS reconstruction techniques for the spiral
first-pass myocardial perfusion imaging at acceleration
factor 2 and 4 by downsampling the full acquired
clinical data. We find that at lower acceleration
factor, all the techniques work well while at the higher
acceleration rate, images reconstructed by CS with
finite-difference in time have similar SNR and image
quality to the fully sampled images and may have a SNR
advantage compared to other parallel imaging techniques.
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