In vivo and in vitro validation of aortic flow quantification by time-resolved three-dimensional velocity-encoded MRI

被引:0
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作者
Fabian Rengier
Michael Delles
Roland Unterhinninghofen
Sebastian Ley
Matthias Müller-Eschner
Sasan Partovi
Philipp Geisbüsch
Rüdiger Dillmann
Hans-Ulrich Kauczor
Hendrik von Tengg-Kobligk
机构
[1] University Hospital Heidelberg,Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology
[2] German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) Heidelberg,Department of Radiology
[3] Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT),Department of Informatics, Institute for Anthropomatics
[4] University Hospital Heidelberg,Department of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery
关键词
Magnetic resonance imaging; Blood flow velocity; Three-dimensional imaging; Cardiovascular diagnostic techniques; Aorta;
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学科分类号
摘要
Three-dimensional velocity-encoded cine magnetic resonance imaging (3D VEC MRI) allows for calculation of secondary flow parameters that may be used to estimate prognosis of individual cardiovascular diseases. However, its accuracy has not been fully investigated yet. The purpose of this study was to validate aortic flow quantification by 3D VEC MRI in vitro and in vivo using stacked two-dimensional acquisitions. Time-resolved stacks of two-dimensional planes with three-directional velocity-encoding (stacked-2D-3dir-MRI) were acquired in an elastic tube phantom with pulsatile flow simulating aortic flow as well as in 11 healthy volunteers (23 ± 2 years). Previously validated two-dimensional through-plane VEC MRI at six equidistant levels in vitro and three locations in vivo (ascending aorta/aortic arch/descending aorta) was used as reference standard. The percentage difference of the stacked-2D-3dir-MRI measurement to the reference standard was defined as the parameter for accuracy. For in vitro aortic flow, stacked-2D-3dir-MRI underestimated average velocity by −6.8% (p < 0.001), overestimated average area by 13.6% (p < 0.001), and underestimated average flow by −7.4% (p < 0.001). Accuracy was significantly higher in the field of view centre compared to off-centre (p = 0.001). In vivo, stacked-2D-3dir-MRI underestimated average velocity (all three locations p < 0.001) and overestimated average area at all three locations (p = n.s./<0.001/<0.001). Average flow was significantly underestimated in the ascending aorta (p = 0.035), but tended to be overestimated in the aortic arch and descending aorta. In conclusion, stacked-2D-3dir-MRI tends to overestimate average aortic area and to underestimate average aortic velocity, resulting in significant underestimation of average flow in the ascending aorta.
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页码:1999 / 2008
页数:9
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