34 research outputs found
Mapping Myocardial Fiber Orientation Using Echocardiography-Based Shear Wave Imaging
The assessment of disrupted myocardial fiber arrangement may help to understand and diagnose hypertrophic or ischemic cardiomyopathy. We hereby proposed and developed shear wave imaging (SWI), which is an echocardiography-based, noninvasive, real-time, and easy-to-use technique, to map myofiber orientation. Five in vitro porcine and three in vivo open-chest ovine hearts were studied. Known in physics, shear wave propagates faster along than across the fiber direction. SWI is a technique that can generate shear waves travelling in different directions with respect to each myocardial layer. SWI further analyzed the shear wave velocity across the entire left-ventricular (LV) myocardial thickness, ranging between 10 (diastole) and 25 mm (systole), with a resolution of 0.2 mm in the middle segment of the LV anterior wall region. The fiber angle at each myocardial layer was thus estimated by finding the maximum shear wave speed. In the in vitro porcine myocardium (n=5), the SWI-estimated fiber angles gradually changed from +80° ± 7° (endocardium) to +30° ± 13° (midwall) and-40° ± 10° (epicardium) with 0° aligning with the circumference of the heart. This transmural fiber orientation was well correlated with histology findings (r2=0.91± 0.02, p<0.0001). SWI further succeeded in mapping the transmural fiber orientation in three beating ovine hearts in vivo. At midsystole, the average fiber orientation exhibited 71° ± 13° (endocardium), 27° ± 8° (midwall), and-26° ± 30° (epicardium). We demonstrated the capability of SWI in mapping myocardial fiber orientation in vitro and in vivo. SWI may serve as a new tool for the noninvasive characterization of myocardial fiber structure. © 2012 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
Experimental validation of a novel technique for ultrasound imaging of cardiac fiber orientation
International audienc
The effect of stretching on transmural shear wave anisotropy in cardiac shear wave elastography
Shear Wave Elastography (SWE) is a potential tool for non-invasively assessing myocardial stiffness to
support diagnosis and treatment choice in patients with cardiac disorders. Previous studies demonstrated a 3D anisotropic shear wave propagation in cardiac SWE due to the intrinsic myocardial fiber architecture. The aim of this work is to further investigate the performance of cardiac SWE by studying the effect of uniaxial stretching on anisotropic shear wave propagation and characterization. Results showed a clear
increase in group and dominant phase speed during stretching, especially along the direction of the fiber. Additionally, the maximal group and dominant phase speed value spatially shifted while stretching, indicating an alignment of the fibers to the stretching direction. Complementary numerical modeling could further explore these interactions between myocardial fiber architecture and cardiac loading during SWE
Imaging the dynamics of cardiac fiber orientation in vivo using 3D Ultrasound Backscatter Tensor Imaging
The assessment of myocardial fiber disarray is of major interest for the
study of the progression of myocardial disease. However, time-resolved imaging
of the myocardial structure remains unavailable in clinical practice. In this
study, we introduce 3D Backscatter Tensor Imaging (3D-BTI), an entirely novel
ultrasound-based imaging technique that can map the myocardial fibers
orientation and its dynamics with a temporal resolution of 10 ms during a
single cardiac cycle, non-invasively and in vivo in entire volumes. 3D-BTI is
based on ultrafast volumetric ultrasound acquisitions, which are used to
quantify the spatial coherence of backscattered echoes at each point of the
volume. The capability of 3D-BTI to map the fibers orientation was evaluated in
vitro in 5 myocardial samples. The helicoidal transmural variation of fiber
angles was in good agreement with the one obtained by histological analysis.
3D-BTI was then performed to map the fiber orientation dynamics in vivo in the
beating heart of an open-chest sheep at a volume rate of 90 volumes/s. Finally,
the clinical feasibility of 3D-BTI was shown on a healthy volunteer. These
initial results indicate that 3D-BTI could become a fully non-invasive
technique to assess myocardial disarray at the bedside of patients
Toward three-dimensional echocardiographic determination of regional myofiber structure
As a step toward the goal of relating changes in underlying myocardial structure to observed altered cardiac function in the hearts of individual patients, this study addresses the feasibility of creating echocardiography-derived maps of regional myocardial fiber structure for entire, intact, excised sheep hearts. Backscatter data were obtained from apical echocardiographic images acquired with a clinical ultrasonic imaging system and used to determine local fiber orientations in each of seven hearts. Systematic acquisition across the entire heart volume provided information sufficient to give a complete map for each heart. Results from the echocardiography-derived fiber maps compare favorably with corresponding results derived from diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging. The results of this study provide evidence of the feasibility of using echocardiographic methods to generate individualized whole heart fiber maps for patients
Cardiac Shear Wave Elastography Using a Clinical Ultrasound System
The propagation velocity of shear waves relates to tissue stiffness. We prove that a regular clinical cardiac ultrasound system can determine shear wave velocity with a conventional unmodified tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) application. The investigation was performed on five tissue phantoms with different stiffness using a research platform capable of inducing and tracking shear waves and a clinical cardiac system (Philips iE33, achieving frame rates of 400-700 Hz in TDI by tuning the normal system settings). We also tested the technique in vivo on a normal individual and on typical pathologies modifying the consistency of the left ventricular wall. The research platform scanner was used as reference. Shear wave velocities measured with TDI on the clinical cardiac system were very close to those measured by the research platform scanner. The mean difference between the clinical and research systems was 0.18 ± 0.22 m/s, and the limits of agreement, from -0.27 to +0.63 m/s. In vivo, the velocity of the wave induced by aortic valve closure in the interventricular septum increased in patients with expected increased wall stiffness
Extracting Three-Dimensional Orientation and Tractography of Myofibers Using Optical Coherence Tomography
Abnormal changes in orientation of myofibers are associated with various cardiac diseases such as arrhythmia, irregular contraction, and cardiomyopathy. To extract fiber information, we present a method of quantifying fiber orientation and reconstructing three-dimensional tractography of myofibers using optical coherence tomography (OCT). A gradient based algorithm was developed to quantify fiber orientation in three dimensions and particle filtering technique was employed to track myofibers. Prior to image processing, three-dimensional image data set were acquired from all cardiac chambers and ventricular septum of swine hearts using OCT system without optical clearing. The algorithm was validated through rotation test and comparison with manual measurements. The experimental results demonstrate that we are able to visualize three-dimensional fiber tractography in myocardium tissues
Imaging the dynamics of cardiac fiber orientation in vivo using 3D Ultrasound Backscatter Tensor Imaging
ABSTRACT: The assessment of myocardial fiber disarray is of major interest for the study of the progression of myocardial disease. However, time-resolved imaging of the myocardial structure remains unavailable in clinical practice. In this study, we introduce 3D Backscatter Tensor Imaging (3D-BTI), an entirely novel ultrasound-based imaging technique that can map the myocardial fibers orientation and its dynamics with a temporal resolution of 10 ms during a single cardiac cycle, non-invasively and in vivo in entire volumes. 3D-BTI is based on ultrafast volumetric ultrasound acquisitions, which are used to quantify the spatial coherence of backscattered echoes at each point of the volume. The capability of 3D-BTI to map the fibers orientation was evaluated in vitro in 5 myocardial samples. The helicoidal transmural variation of fiber angles was in good agreement with the one obtained by histological analysis. 3D-BTI was then performed to map the fiber orientation dynamics in vivo in the beating heart of an open-chest sheep at a volume rate of 90 volumes/s. Finally, the clinical feasibility of 3D-BTI was shown on a healthy volunteer. These initial results indicate that 3D-BTI could become a fully non-invasive technique to assess myocardial disarray at the bedside of patients