Dose correction for post-contrast T1 mapping of the heart: the MESA study

被引:0
|
作者
Neville D. Gai
Veit Sandfort
Songtao Liu
João A. C. Lima
David A. Bluemke
机构
[1] National Institutes of Health/Clinical Center,Radiology and Imaging Sciences (RAD&IS)
[2] Johns Hopkins Medicine,undefined
[3] NIBIB,undefined
关键词
T1 mapping; Cardiac; Dose correction; Blood volume; Plasma volume;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Post-contrast myocardial T1 (T1myo,c) values have been shown to be sensitive to myocardial fibrosis. Recent studies have shown differences in results obtained from T1myo,c and extracellular volume fraction (ECV) with respect to percentage fibrosis. By exploring the relationship between blood plasma volume and T1myo,c, the underlying basis for the divergence can be explained. Furthermore, dose administration based on body mass index (BMI), age and gender can mitigate the divergence in results. Inter-subject comparison of T1myo,c required adjustment for dose (in mmol/kg), time and glomerular filtration rate. Further adjustment for effective dose based on lean muscle mass reflected by blood/plasma volume was performed. A test case of 605 subjects from the MESA study who had undergone pre- and post-contrast T1 mapping was studied. T1myo,c values were compared between subjects with and without metabolic syndrome (MetS), between smoking and non-smoking subjects, and subjects with and without impaired glucose tolerance, before and after dose adjustment based on plasma volume. Comparison with ECV (which is dose independent), pre-contrast myocardial T1 and blood normalized myocardial T1 values was also performed to validate the correction. There were significant differences in T1myo,c (post plasma volume correction) and ECV between current and former smokers (p value 0.017 and 0.01, respectively) but not T1myo,c prior to correction (p = 0.12). Prior to dose adjustment for plasma volume, p value was <0.001 for T1myo,c between MetS and non-MetS groups and was 0.13 between subjects with and without glucose intolerance; after adjustment for PV, p value was 0.63 and 0.99. Corresponding ECV p values were 0.44 and 0.99, respectively. Overall, ECV results showed the best agreement with PV corrected T1myo,c (mean absolute difference in p values = 0.073) and pre-contrast myocardial T1 in comparison with other measures (T1myo,c prior to correction, blood/plasma T1 value normalized myocardium). Weight-based contrast dosing administered in mmol/kg results in a bias in T1 values which can lead to erroneous conclusions. After adjustment for lean muscle mass based on plasma volume, results from T1myo,c were in line with ECV derived results. Furthermore, the use of a modified equivalent dose adjusted for BMI, age, sex and hematocrit can be adopted for quantitative imaging.
引用
收藏
页码:271 / 279
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Evaluation of Post-Contrast Myocardial T1 in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Using Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    Soslow, Jonathan H.
    Damon, Bruce M.
    Saville, Benjamin R.
    Lu, Zengqi
    Burnette, W. Bryan
    Lawson, Mark A.
    Parra, David A.
    Sawyer, Douglas B.
    Markham, Larry W.
    PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY, 2015, 36 (01) : 49 - 56
  • [22] Comparison of pre- and post-contrast myocardial T1 with histology findings in Experimental autoimmune myocarditis in rats
    Sarah Jeuthe
    Katharina Wassilew
    Darach O h-Ici
    Frédéric H Münch
    Hergen Payne
    Patrick Schmerler
    Felix Berger
    Titus Kuehne
    Daniel Messroghli
    Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 17 (Suppl 1)
  • [23] Improved segmentation of juxtacortical and infratentorial white matter lesions in MS on post-contrast T1 and FLAIR MR
    Ghumare, E.
    Vercruyssen, S.
    Rakic, M.
    Jain, S.
    Sima, D.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2021, 28 : 322 - 322
  • [24] Evaluation of Post-Contrast Myocardial T1 in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Using Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    Jonathan H. Soslow
    Bruce M. Damon
    Benjamin R. Saville
    Zengqi Lu
    W. Bryan Burnette
    Mark A. Lawson
    David A. Parra
    Douglas B. Sawyer
    Larry W. Markham
    Pediatric Cardiology, 2015, 36 : 49 - 56
  • [25] Improved motion correction for T1 mapping
    Sébastien Roujol
    Murilo Foppa
    Keigo Kawaji
    Kraig V Kissinger
    Beth Goddu
    Warren J Manning
    Reza Nezafat
    Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 16 (Suppl 1)
  • [26] T1-refBlochi: high resolution 3D post-contrast T1 myocardial mapping based on a single 3D late gadolinium enhancement volume, Bloch equations, and a reference T1
    Hu, Chenxi
    Sinusas, Albert J.
    Huber, Steffen
    Thorn, Stephanie
    Stacy, Mitchel R.
    Mojibian, Hamid
    Peters, Dana C.
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 2017, 19
  • [27] T1-refBlochi: high resolution 3D post-contrast T1 myocardial mapping based on a single 3D late gadolinium enhancement volume, Bloch equations, and a reference T1
    Chenxi Hu
    Albert J. Sinusas
    Steffen Huber
    Stephanie Thorn
    Mitchel R. Stacy
    Hamid Mojibian
    Dana C. Peters
    Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 19
  • [28] 3.0T Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Quantification of Myocardial Extracellular Volume using different delay time of post-contrast T1 mapping for the Diagnosis of Cardiac Amyloidosis
    Lu Lin
    Yining Wang
    Jian Cao
    Lingyan Kong
    Jing An
    Tianjing Zhang
    Bruce S Spottiswoode
    Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 18 (Suppl 1)
  • [29] THE DIAGNOSTIC PERFORMANCE OF POST-CONTRAST 3-D ULTRASHORT ECHO TIME SEQUENCE OF SACROILIITIS IN PATIENTS WITH AXIAL SPONDYLOARTHROPATHY COMPARING WITH CONVENTIONAL POST-CONTRAST FAT SUPPRESSED T1 WEIGHTED SEQUENCE
    Jung, K. H.
    Kim, Y. J.
    Park, W.
    Lim, M. J.
    Carl, M.
    Kim, D. E.
    Hwang, M.
    Cha, J. G.
    Kwon, S.
    ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES, 2016, 75 : 632 - 632
  • [30] Cardiac ECV is more robust than post-contrast cardiac T1 for evaluating temporal changes in LV fibrosis
    Kyungpyo Hong
    Matthias Koopmann
    Eugene G Kholmovski
    Eric C Huang
    Nan Hu
    Richard Levenson
    Sathya Vijayakumar
    Derek J Dosdall
    Ravi Ranjan
    Daniel Kim
    Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 16 (Suppl 1)