14 research outputs found

    Analytical method to measure three-dimensional strain patterns in the left ventricle from single slice displacement data

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    Background: Displacement encoded Cardiovascular MR (CMR) can provide high spatial resolution measurements of three-dimensional (3D) Lagrangian displacement. Spatial gradients of the Lagrangian displacement field are used to measure regional myocardial strain. In general, adjacent parallel slices are needed in order to calculate the spatial gradient in the through-slice direction. This necessitates the acquisition of additional data and prolongs the scan time. The goal of this study is to define an analytic solution that supports the reconstruction of the out-of-plane components of the Lagrangian strain tensor in addition to the in-plane components from a single-slice displacement CMR dataset with high spatio-temporal resolution. The technique assumes incompressibility of the myocardium as a physical constraint. Results: The feasibility of the method is demonstrated in a healthy human subject and the results are compared to those of other studies. The proposed method was validated with simulated data and strain estimates from experimentally measured DENSE data, which were compared to the strain calculation from a conventional two-slice acquisition. Conclusion: This analytical method reduces the need to acquire data from adjacent slices when calculating regional Lagrangian strains and can effectively reduce the long scan time by a factor of two

    Myocardial tagging by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance: evolution of techniques--pulse sequences, analysis algorithms, and applications

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    Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) tagging has been established as an essential technique for measuring regional myocardial function. It allows quantification of local intramyocardial motion measures, e.g. strain and strain rate. The invention of CMR tagging came in the late eighties, where the technique allowed for the first time for visualizing transmural myocardial movement without having to implant physical markers. This new idea opened the door for a series of developments and improvements that continue up to the present time. Different tagging techniques are currently available that are more extensive, improved, and sophisticated than they were twenty years ago. Each of these techniques has different versions for improved resolution, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), scan time, anatomical coverage, three-dimensional capability, and image quality. The tagging techniques covered in this article can be broadly divided into two main categories: 1) Basic techniques, which include magnetization saturation, spatial modulation of magnetization (SPAMM), delay alternating with nutations for tailored excitation (DANTE), and complementary SPAMM (CSPAMM); and 2) Advanced techniques, which include harmonic phase (HARP), displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE), and strain encoding (SENC). Although most of these techniques were developed by separate groups and evolved from different backgrounds, they are in fact closely related to each other, and they can be interpreted from more than one perspective. Some of these techniques even followed parallel paths of developments, as illustrated in the article. As each technique has its own advantages, some efforts have been made to combine different techniques together for improved image quality or composite information acquisition. In this review, different developments in pulse sequences and related image processing techniques are described along with the necessities that led to their invention, which makes this article easy to read and the covered techniques easy to follow. Major studies that applied CMR tagging for studying myocardial mechanics are also summarized. Finally, the current article includes a plethora of ideas and techniques with over 300 references that motivate the reader to think about the future of CMR tagging

    Assessment of distribution and evolution of Mechanical dyssynchrony in a porcine model of myocardial infarction by cardiovascular magnetic resonance

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    BACKGROUND: We sought to investigate the relationship between infarct and dyssynchrony post- myocardial infarct (MI), in a porcine model. Mechanical dyssynchrony post-MI is associated with left ventricular (LV) remodeling and increased mortality. METHODS: Cine, gadolinium-contrast, and tagged cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) were performed pre-MI, 9 ± 2 days (early post-MI), and 33 ± 10 days (late post-MI) post-MI in 6 pigs to characterize cardiac morphology, location and extent of MI, and regional mechanics. LV mechanics were assessed by circumferential strain (eC). Electro-anatomic mapping (EAM) was performed within 24 hrs of CMR and prior to sacrifice. RESULTS: Mean infarct size was 21 ± 4% of LV volume with evidence of post-MI remodeling. Global eC significantly decreased post MI (-27 ± 1.6% vs. -18 ± 2.5% (early) and -17 ± 2.7% (late), p < 0.0001) with no significant change in peri-MI and MI segments between early and late time-points. Time to peak strain (TTP) was significantly longer in MI, compared to normal and peri-MI segments, both early (440 ± 40 ms vs. 329 ± 40 ms and 332 ± 36 ms, respectively; p = 0.0002) and late post-MI (442 ± 63 ms vs. 321 ± 40 ms and 355 ± 61 ms, respectively; p = 0.012). The standard deviation of TTP in 16 segments (SD16) significantly increased post-MI: 28 ± 7 ms to 50 ± 10 ms (early, p = 0.012) to 54 ± 19 ms (late, p = 0.004), with no change between early and late post-MI time-points (p = 0.56). TTP was not related to reduction of segmental contractility. EAM revealed late electrical activation and greatly diminished conduction velocity in the infarct (5.7 ± 2.4 cm/s), when compared to peri-infarct (18.7 ± 10.3 cm/s) and remote myocardium (39 ± 20.5 cm/s). CONCLUSIONS: Mechanical dyssynchrony occurs early after MI and is the result of delayed electrical and mechanical activation in the infarct

    Towards automating cine DENSE MRI image analysis : segmentation, tissue tracking and strain computation

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    Includes bibliographical references (p. 192-206).Over the past two decades, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has developed into a powerful imaging tool for the heart. Imaging cardiac morphology is now commonplace in clinical practice, and a plethora of quantitative techniques have also arisen on the research front. Myocardial tagging is an established quantitative cardiac MRI method that involves magnetically tagging the heart with a set of saturated bands, and monitoring the deformation of these bands as the heart contracts

    MR imaging of left-ventricular function : novel image acquisition and analysis techniques.

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    Many cardiac diseases, such as myocardial ischemia, secondary to coronary artery disease, may be identified and localized through the analysis of cardiac deformations. Early efforts for quantifying ventricular wall motion used surgical implantation and tracking of radiopaque markers with X-ray imaging in canine hearts [1]. Such techniques are invasive and affect the regional motion pattern of the ventricular wall during the marker tracking process and, clearly are not feasible clinically. Noninvasive imaging techniques are vital and have been widely applied to the clinic. MRI is a noninvasive imaging technique with the capability to monitor and assess the progression of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) so that effective procedures for the care and treatment of patients can be developed by physicians and researchers. It is capable of providing 3D analysis of global and regional cardiac function with great accuracy and reproducibility. In the past few years, numerous efforts have been devoted to cardiac motion recovery and deformation analysis from MR imaging sequences. In order to assess cardiac function, there are two categories of indices that are used: global and regional indices. Global indices include ejection fraction, cavity volume, and myocardial mass [2]. They are important indices for cardiac disease diagnosis. However, these global indices are not specific for regional analysis. A quantitative assessment of regional parameters may prove beneficial for the diagnosis of disease and evaluation of severity and the quantification of treatment [3]. Local measures, such as wall deformation and strain in all regions of the heart, can provide objective regional quantification of ventricular wall function and relate to the location and extent of ischemic injury. This dissertation is concerned with the development of novel MR imaging techniques and image postprocessing algorithms to analyze left ventricular deformations. A novel pulse sequence, termed Orthogonal CSPAMM (OCSPAMM), has been proposed which results in the same acquisition time as SPAMM for 2D deformation estimation while keeping the main advantages of CSPAMM [4,5]: i.e., maintaining tag contrast through-out the ECG cycle. Different from CSPAMM, in OCSPAMM the second tagging pulse orientation is rotated 90 degrees relative to the first one so that motion information can be obtained simultaneously in two directions. This reduces the acquisition time by a factor of two as compared to the traditional CSPAMM, in which two separate imaging sequences are applied per acquisition. With the application of OCSPAMM, the effect of tag fading encountered in SPAMM tagging due to Tl relaxation is mitigated and tag deformations can be visualized for the entire cardiac cycle, including diastolic phases. A multilevel B-spline fitting method (MBS) has been proposed which incorporates phase-based displacement information for accurate calculation of 2D motion and strain from tagged MRI [6, 7]. The proposed method combines the advantages of continuity and smoothness of MBS, and makes use of phase information derived from tagged MR images. Compared to previous 2D B-spline-based deformation analysis methods, MBS has the following advantages: 1) It can simultaneously achieve a smooth deformation while accurately approximating the given data set; 2) Computationally, it is very fast; and 3) It can produce more accurate deformation results. Since the tag intersections (intersections between two tag lines) can be extracted accurately and are more or less distributed evenly over the myocardium, MBS has proven effective for 2D cardiac motion tracking. To derive phase-based displacements, 2D HARP and SinMod analysis techniques [8,9] were employed. By producing virtual tags from HARP /SinMod and calculating intersections of virtual tag lines, more data points are obtained. In the reference frame, virtual tag lines are the isoparametric curves of an undeformed 2D B-spline model. In subsequent frames, the locations of intersections of virtual tag lines over the myocardium are updated with phase-based displacement. The advantage of the technique is that in acquiring denser myocardial displacements, it uses both real and virtual tag line intersections. It is fast and more accurate than 2D HARP and SinMod tracking. A novel 3D sine wave modeling (3D SinMod) approach for automatic analysis of 3D cardiac deformations has been proposed [10]. An accelerated 3D complementary spatial modulation of magnetization (CSPAMM) tagging technique [11] was used to acquire complete 3D+t tagged MR data sets of the whole heart (3 dynamic CSPAMM tagged MRI volume with tags in different orientations), in-vivo, in 54 heart beats and within 3 breath-holds. In 3D SinMod, the intensity distribution around each pixel is modeled as a cosine wave front. The principle behind 3D SinMod tracking is that both phase and frequency for each voxel are determined directly from the frequency analysis and the displacement is calculated from the quotient of phase difference and local frequency. The deformation fields clearly demonstrate longitudinal shortening during systole. The contraction of the LV base towards the apex as well as the torsional motion between basal and apical slices is clearly observable from the displacements. 3D SinMod can automatically process the image data to derive measures of motion, deformations, and strains between consecutive pair of tagged volumes in 17 seconds. Therefore, comprehensive 4D imaging and postprocessing for determination of ventricular function is now possible in under 10 minutes. For validation of 3D SinMod, 7 3D+t CSPAMM data sets of healthy subjects have been processed. Comparison of mid-wall contour deformations and circumferential shortening results by 3D SinMod showed good agreement with those by 3D HARP. Tag lines tracked by the proposed technique were also compared with manually delineated ones. The average errors calculated for the systolic phase of the cardiac cycles were in the sub-pixel range

    Identifying myocardial infarction using hierarchical template matching–based myocardial strain : algorithm development and usability study

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    Background: Myocardial infarction (MI; location and extent of infarction) can be determined by late enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging, which requires the injection of a potentially harmful gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA). Alternatively, emerging research in the area of myocardial strain has shown potential to identify MI using strain values. Objective: This study aims to identify the location of MI by developing an applied algorithmic method of circumferential strain (CS) values, which are derived through a novel hierarchical template matching (HTM) method. Methods: HTM-based CS H-spread from end-diastole to end-systole was used to develop an applied method. Grid-tagging magnetic resonance imaging was used to calculate strain values in the left ventricular (LV) myocardium, followed by the 16-segment American Heart Association model. The data set was used with k-fold cross-validation to estimate the percentage reduction of H-spread among infarcted and noninfarcted LV segments. A total of 43 participants (38 MI and 5 healthy) who underwent CMR imaging were retrospectively selected. Infarcted segments detected by using this method were validated by comparison with late enhancement CMR, and the diagnostic performance of the applied algorithmic method was evaluated with a receiver operating characteristic curve test. Results: The H-spread of the CS was reduced in infarcted segments compared with noninfarcted segments of the LV. The reductions were 30% in basal segments, 30% in midventricular segments, and 20% in apical LV segments. The diagnostic accuracy of detection, using the reported method, was represented by area under the curve values, which were 0.85, 0.82, and 0.87 for basal, midventricular, and apical slices, respectively, demonstrating good agreement with the late-gadolinium enhancement–based detections. Conclusions: The proposed applied algorithmic method has the potential to accurately identify the location of infarcted LV segments without the administration of late-gadolinium enhancement. Such an approach adds the potential to safely identify MI, potentially reduce patient scanning time, and extend the utility of CMR in patients who are contraindicated for the use of GBCA

    Flow Imaging Using MRI: Quantification and Analysis

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    A complex and challenging problem in flow study is to obtain quantitative flow information in opaque systems, for example, blood flow in biological systems and flow channels in chemical reactors. In this regard, MRI is superior to the conventional optical flow imaging or ultrasonic Doppler imaging. However, for high speed flows, complex flow behaviors and turbulences make it difficult to image and analyze the flows. In MR flow imaging, MR tagging technique has demonstrated its ability to simultaneously visualize motion in a sequence of images. Moreover, a quantification method, namely HARmonic Phase (HARP) analysis, can extract a dense velocity field from tagged MR image sequence with minimal manual intervention. In this work, we developed and validated two new MRI methods for quantification of very rapid flows. First, HARP was integrated with a fast MRI imaging method called SEA (Single Echo Acquisition) to image and analyze high velocity flows. Second, an improved HARP method was developed to deal with tag fading and data noise in the raw MRI data. Specifically, a regularization method that incorporates the law of flow dynamics in the HARP analysis was developed. Finally, the methods were validated using results from the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and the conventional optimal flow imaging based on particle image velocimetry (PIV). The results demonstrated the improvement from the quantification using solely the conventional HARP method

    Cardiac image computing for myocardial infarction patients

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    Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), which are a prime cause of global mortality, are disorders that affect the heart and blood vessels' functioning. CVDs may cause consequent complications, due to occlusion in a blood vessel and present as impaired cardiac wall functioning (myocardium). Identifying such impairment (infarction) of the myocardium is of great clinical interest, as it can reveal the nature of altered cardiac topography (ventricular remodelling) to aid the associated intervention decisions. With recent advances in cardiac imaging, such as Magnetic Resonance (MR) imaging, the visualisation and identification of infarcted myocardium has been routinely and effectively used in clinical practice. Diagnosing infarcted myocardium is achieved clinically through the late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) test, which acquires MR images after injecting a gadolinium-based contrast agent (GBCA). Due to the increased accuracy and reproducibility, LGE has emerged as the gold-standard MR imaging test in identifying myocardial infarction. However, clinical studies have reported gadolinium deposition concerns in different body organs and adverse outcomes in patients with advanced kidney failure, over time. Such incidents have motivated researchers to look into the development of both accurate as well as safe diagnostic tools. Emerging research on identifying infarcted myocardium utilises myocardial strain to safely identify infarcted myocardium, which has been addressed in the presented study. For example, myocardial strain represents the shortening or lengthening of the myocardium. If the myocardium is infarcted, then the corresponding strain values differ compared to the healthy myocardium. This finding can be identified and utilised for clinical applications. The research presented in this thesis aims to identify infarcted myocardium accurately and safely by using myocardial strain (shortening or lengthening of the myocardium). To achieve the aforementioned aim, the research methodology is divided into six objectives. The initial objectives relate to the development of a novel myocardial tracking method. The middle objectives relate to the development of clinical application methods, and the final objectives concern the validation of the developed methods through clinical studies and associated datasets. The research presented in this thesis has addressed the following research question: Research question 1: How can a 2D myocardial tracking and strain calculation method be developed using the 2D local weighted mean function and structural deformation within the myocardium? Research question 2: How can a 3D myocardial tracking and strain calculation method be developed using the 3D local weighted mean function to calculate 3D myocardial strain? Research question 3: How can 2D circumferential strain of the myocardium be used in identifying infarcted left ventricular segments for the diagnosis of myocardial infarction patients? In literature, myocardial tracking and strain calculation methods have limited extension to 3D and dependency on tissue material properties. Moreover, additional limitations, such as limited inclusion of structural deformation details within the myocardium, are found in the literature. Therefore, methods are likely to become subjective or numerically unstable during computation. Moreover, the inclusion of myocardial details with grid-tagging MRI, for structural deformation within the myocardium, is more realistic compared to cine MRI.   The aforementioned limitations are overcome by proposing a novel Hierarchical Template Matching method, which performs non-rigid image registration among grid-tagging MR images of a cardiac cycle. This is achieved by employing a local weighted mean transformation function. The proposed non-rigid image registration method does not require the use of tissue material properties. Grid-tagging MRI is used to capture wall function within the myocardium, and the local weighted mean function is used for numerical stability. The performance of the developed methods is evaluated with multiple error measures and with a benchmark framework. This benchmark framework has provided an open-access 3D dataset, a set of validation methods, and results of four leading methods for comparison. Validation methods include qualitative and quantitative methods. The qualitative assessment of outcomes and verified ground truth for the quantitative evaluation of results are followed from the benchmark framework paper (Tobon-Gomez, Craene, Mcleod, et al., 2013). 2D HTM method has reported the root mean square error of point tracking in left ventricular slices, which are the basal slice 0.31±0.07 mm, the upper mid-ventricular slice 0.37±0.06 mm, the mid-ventricular slice 0.41±0.05 mm, and the apical slice 0.32±0.08 mm. The mid-ventricular slice has a significantly higher 4% (P=0.05) mean root mean square error compared to the other slices. However, the other slices do not have a significant difference among them. Compared to the benchmark free form deformation method, HTM has a mean error of 0.35±0.05 mm, which is 17% (P=0.07, CI:[-0.01,0.35]) reduced to the free form deformation method. Our technical method has shown the 3D extension of HTM and a method without using material properties, which is advantageous compared to the methods which are limited to 2D or dependent on material properties. Moreover, the 3D HTM has demonstrated the use of 3D local weighted mean function in 3D myocardial tracking. While comparing to the benchmark methods, it was found that the median tracking error of 3D HTM is comparable to benchmark methods and has very few outliers compared to them. The clinical results are validated with LGE imaging. The quantitative error measure is the area under the curve (AUC) of sensitivity vs 1-specificity curve of the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) test. The achieved AUC value in detecting infarcted segments in basal, mid-ventricular, and apical slices are 0.85, 0.82, and 0.87, respectively. Calculating AUC with 95% confidence level, the confidence intervals of lower and upper mean AUC values in basal, mid-ventricular and apical slices are [0.80, 0.89], [0.74, 0.85], and [0.78, 0.91], respectively. Overall, considering the detections of LGE imaging as the base, our method has an accuracy of AUC 0.73 (P=0.05) in identifying infarcted left ventricular segments. The developed methods have shown, systematically, a promising approach in identifying infarcted left ventricular segments by image processing method and without using GBCA-based LGE imaging.

    Imaging the Vocal Folds: A Feasibility Study on Strain Imaging and Elastography of Porcine Vocal Folds

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    Vocal folds are an essential part of human voice production. The biomechanical properties are a good indicator for pathological changes. In particular, as an oscillation system, changes in the biomechanical properties have an impact on the vibration behavior. Subsequently, those changes could lead to voice-related disturbances. However, no existing examination combines biomechanical properties and spatial imaging. Therefore, we propose an image registration-based approach, using ultrasound in order to gain this information synchronously. We used a quasi-static load to compress the tissue and measured the displacement by image registration. The strain distribution was directly calculated from the displacement field, whereas the elastic properties were estimated by a finite element model. In order to show the feasibility and reliability of the algorithm, we tested it on gelatin phantoms. Further, by examining ex vivo porcine vocal folds, we were able to show the practicability of the approach. We displayed the strain distribution in the tissue and the elastic properties of the vocal folds. The results were superimposed on the corresponding ultrasound images. The findings are promising and show the feasibility of the suggested approach. Possible applications are in improved diagnosis of voice disorders, by measuring the biomechanical properties of the vocal folds with ultrasound. The transducer will be placed on the vocal folds of the anesthetized patient, and the elastic properties will be measured. Further, the understanding of the vocal folds’ biomechanics and the voice forming process could benefit from it
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