| Literature DB >> 20849589 |
Andreas Schuster1, Inga Grünwald, Amedeo Chiribiri, Richard Southworth, Masaki Ishida, Gunnar Hay, Nicole Neumann, Geraint Morton, Divaka Perera, Tobias Schaeffter, Eike Nagel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Novel cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) techniques and imaging biomarkers are often validated in small animal models or empirically in patients. Direct translation of small animal CMR protocols to humans is rarely possible, while validation in humans is often difficult, slow and occasionally not possible due to ethical considerations. The aim of this study is to overcome these limitations by introducing an MR-compatible, free beating, blood-perfused, isolated pig heart model for the development of novel CMR methodology.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20849589 PMCID: PMC2950014 DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-12-53
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Figure 1Schematic view of the perfusion system. Starting from the perfusate reservoir (38°C) the perfusate is first passed through roller pump 2 into a dialysis module and then through a blood oxygenator with integrated heat exchanger. The oxygenated blood is then pumped into the heart via roller pump 1. Before entering the heart an air trap removes air bubbles from the perfusate. The dialysate (38°C) is pumped through the dialysis module with a centrifugal pump (pump 3, flow of 5 l min -1) to exchange metabolites (contrast agent clearance) between the venous perfusate and the dialysate. The dialysate is re-circulated in a reservoir. T: sensor for dialysate temperature; O2 and CO2: valves for oxygen and carbon dioxide input. The perfusate reservoir and the venous and arterial blood circuits are fully water-jacketed. Temperature is controlled by an external heater.
Figure 2MR compatible model. Column A, B and C show the technical setup of the MR compatible perfusion system in detail. A and B All electrical parts (control-unit, power-supply, pumps etc.) are placed approximately 6 metres away from the magnet. The pump engines were then connected to the custom made pump heads using polycarbon drive shafts. C Detail of the trolley containing dialysis unit and oxygenator.
Arterial Blood Gas Analysis and Oxymetry (average and standard deviation for n = 6 pigs).
| Perfusion Time [min] | 0 | 15 | 30 | 60 | 90 | 120 | 150 | 180 | 210 | 240 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7,66 ± 0,15 | 7,55 ± 0,1 | 7,51 ± 0,14 | 7,45 ± 0,04 | 7,42 ± 0,04 | 7,4 ± 0,03 | 7,39 ± 0,02 | 7,38 ± 0,04 | 7,41 ± 0,03 | 7,43 ± 0,04 | |
| 299 ± 49 | 265 ± 146 | 273 ± 86 | 252 ± 28 | 215 ± 50 | 230 ± 40 | 271 ± 40 | 282 ± 50 | 273 ± 55 | 280 ± 38 | |
| 20 ± 7 | 26 ± 6 | 27 ± 5 | 32 ± 4 | 34 ± 4 | 35 ± 3 | 36 ± 4 | 36 ± 5 | 33 ± 5 | 32 ± 5 | |
| 5,7 ± 0,8 | 4,9 ± 0,4 | 5,3 ± 0,6 | 4,5 ± 0,6 | 4,5 ± 0,4 | 4,9 ± 0,8 | 4,7 ± 0,4 | 5,2 ± 0,6 | 4,7 ± 0,6 | 4,5 ± 0,4 | |
| 0,45 ± 0,02 | 1,16 ± 0,12 | 1,23 ± 0,1 | 1,28 ± 0,11 | 1,28 ± 0,11 | 1,27 ± 0,11 | 1,28 ± 0,11 | 1,28 ± 0,12 | 1,27 ± 0,11 | 1,26 ± 0,11 | |
| 5 ± 0,1 | 5,1 ± 0,1 | 5,1 ± 0,1 | 5,1 ± 0,2 | 5,1 ± 0,2 | 5,1 ± 0,2 | 5,2 ± 0,2 | 5,3 ± 0,2 | 5,3 ± 0,2 | 5,3 ± 0,2 | |
| 132 ± 6 | 131 ± 5 | 131 ± 4 | 132 ± 4 | 132 ± 4 | 132 ± 4 | 132 ± 4 | 132 ± 4 | 133 ± 4 | 133 ± 4 | |
| 111 ± 3 | 110 ± 4 | 111 ± 5 | 110 ± 5 | 110 ± 4 | 110 ± 4 | 111 ± 4 | 110 ± 4 | 111 ± 4 | 111 ± 5 | |
| 8,7 ± 0,3 | 8,5 ± 0,1 | 8,4 ± 0,1 | 8 ± 0,2 | 7,8 ± 0,2 | 7,5 ± 0,1 | 7,1 ± 0,2 | 6,7 ± 0,2 | 6,6 ± 0,2 | 6,3 ± 0,2 | |
| 0,5 ± 0,2 | 0,7 ± 0,2 | 0,9 ± 0,2 | 1,1 ± 0,2 | 1,3 ± 0,2 | 1,5 ± 0,2 | 1,7 ± 0,2 | 2 ± 0,3 | 2,3 ± 0,3 | 2,6 ± 0,4 | |
Figure 3Average coronary blood flow and perfusion pressure during phase 1. Coronary Perfusion Pressure (CPP, [mmHg]) and Coronary Blood Flow (CBF [ml/min/100 g]) during 240 minutes of direct coronary perfusion.
Figure 4Determination of signal intensity curves during first pass perfusion in the isolated pig heart. The figure shows a short axis cut through one isolated pig heart imaged at 1.5 Tesla. The image plane contains a perpendicular cut through the arterial inflow tubing. The arterial input function including prebolus can be obtained from the blood pool during first pass of gadolinium. The myocardial response curve can be obtained shortly afterwards during wash-in of contrast media into the myocardium. The images have been segmented to improve visibility.
Figure 5Selective perfusion imaging of the right coronary artery (RCA) and left coronary artery (LCA) perfusion territories in the isolated pig heart. Figure 5 show two short axis slices during first pass perfusion of gadolinium imaged at 3 Tesla after selective injection into the right and left coronary artery, respectively. A Anatomic reference plane (basal slice). B k-t SENSE selective RCA first pass perfusion. C k-t SENSE selective LCA first pass perfusion. The images have been segmented to improve visibility.
Figure 6Perfusion territory and Size of Infarction. The perfusion territory of the RCA was mapped in the 3 Tesla scanner by first pass perfusion with direct injection of the contrast agent into the RCA (central image). The perfusion territory was 96 g (36% of left ventricular myocardial mass). Then the RCA was occluded for 180 minutes. Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE, image on the right) resulted in 95 g myocardial infarction (36% of LV mass). The close agreement of LGE and selective RCA perfusion highlights the almost complete absence of collaterals in pigs. A Anatomic reference plane (midmyocardial slice). B k-t SENSE selective RCA first pass perfusion. C LGE image after 180 minutes of RCA occlusion. The images have been segmented to improve visibility.