| Literature DB >> 21980376 |
Diana S Nascimento1, Mariana Valente, Tiago Esteves, Maria de Fátima de Pina, Joana G Guedes, Ana Freire, Pedro Quelhas, Perpétua Pinto-do-Ó.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The cardiac regenerative potential of newly developed therapies is traditionally evaluated in rodent models of surgically induced myocardial ischemia. A generally accepted key parameter for determining the success of the applied therapy is the infarct size. Although regarded as a gold standard method for infarct size estimation in heart ischemia, histological planimetry is time-consuming and highly variable amongst studies. The purpose of this work is to contribute towards the standardization and simplification of infarct size assessment by providing free access to a novel semi-automated software tool. The acronym MIQuant was attributed to this application. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21980376 PMCID: PMC3184116 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Manual and MIQuant semi-automated calculation of MI size in chronic infarcts.
(A) LV representative MT stained sections, numbered from the apex to the LV base, were obtained from an infarcted heart harvested at 21 days post-surgery. (B) Histological infarct size calculation by the area method requires manual tracing of the LV myocardium (light gray) and of the scarred LV tissue (black). The infarct size, expressed as a percentage, is the division of the infarct area by the LV area multiplied by 100. For the midline length approach (right) the midline, herein defined as the mid-region between the epicardial and endocardial surfaces, of the total LV (dashed line) and of scarred region (full line) are manually traced. The infarct size, expressed as a percentage, is the division of the infarct midline length by the LV midline length multiplied by 100. The total LV infarct extent is the average of infarct size obtained for the LV representative cross-sections (A). (C) Screen shot of MIQuant layout following infarct size calculation. Multiple images can be uploaded in TIFF or JPEG file-formats and the software calculates the intermediate values of infarct size for each image (bottom right). A total MI size is also generated assuming that the uploaded images were representative sections of the LV. For selection of the scarred myocardium (top right) the software requires the user to double-click in a normal tissue region and in the LV lumen, if applicable, over the uploaded image (top left).
Figure 2Consistency and reproducibility of MIQuant infarct size calculation.
(A) Consistency of manual and MIQuant infarct size results obtained using the area and midline length measurements. Hearts were harvested at 21 days post-surgery and infarct size determinations are the mean value of 12 cross-sections representative of the LV. Mann-Whitney statistical analysis demonstrated significant differences between the area and midline length methods, as already described by Takagawa [10]. (B) Reproducibility of MIQuant measurements. Although ANOVA demonstrated no significant influence of the observer on the LV infarct size scores obtained, neither manually nor using MIQuant, the latter displays a tendency for lower discrepancy between operators. ⋄ indicates the mean value of each group. * p<0.05.
Repeatability analysis of the manual and MIQuant results by repeated measures one-way ANOVA.
| MI size (%) | Midline length measurement1 | Area measurement2 | ||||
| Measurement 1 | Measurement 2 | Measurement 3 | Measurement 1 | Measurement 2 | Measurement 3 | |
| Manual | 44.24±13.01 | 44.84±12.62 | 45.03±12.82 | 31.23±9.60 | 32.51±9.29 | 31,92±9.25 |
|
| 44.66±13.26 | 44.58±13.00 | 45.61±13.01 | 34.02±8.71 | 34.00±8.16 | 35,04±8.72 |
Values area mean ± STDEV; n = 20; 1, a LV: Wilks'Lambda = 0.818, F(2, 18) = 2.0001, p = 0.164, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.18; section: Wilks'Lambda = 0.990, F(2, 234) = 2.0001, p = 0.140, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.322; 1, b LV: Wilks'Lambda = 0.757, F(2, 18) = 2.892, p = 0.081, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.24; section: Wilks'Lambda = 0.977, F(2, 234) = 2.734, p = 0.067, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.023; 2, a LV: Wilks'Lambda = 0.848, F(2, 18) = 1.617, p = 0.226, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.15; section: Wilks'Lambda = 0.969, F(2, 234) = 3.737, p = 0.025, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.031; 2, b LV: Wilks'Lambda = 0.827, F(2, 18) = 1.886, p = 0.180, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.17; section: Wilks'Lambda = 0.981, F(2, 234) = 2.286, p = 0.104, multivariate partial eta squared = 0.019.
Figure 3Validation of MIQuant for infarct size assessment.
(A) Infarct size scatter diagram and the Pearson coefficient demonstrated strong association between manual and MIQuant results for area (right) and midline length (left) approaches. (B) Bland-Altman concordance analysis of the manual and MIQuant infarct size measurements demonstrated acceptable limits of agreement between methods. Average values of the three independent measures of infarct size per section (B) and per heart (C) were subject to the analysis. Differences between the infarct sizes retrieved by each method (MIQuant-manual) are displayed in the y-axis and the mean infarct size values are plotted in the x-axis. The limits of agreement (- -) and bias (▪▪▪) and respective 95% confidence intervals ([ ]) are shown.
Figure 4MIQuant efficacy is not affected by user proficiency.
MIQuant infarct size values obtained by competent (experts) and non-trained (volunteer) users were compared and the mean values are displayed as graph bars. Independent-samples t-test showed no significant differences between infarct scores calculated by the experts vs. volunteers; furthermore, a two–way ANOVA demonstrated no significant influence of the user on the obtained infarct size value.
Figure 5MIQuant improves the time-efficiency of infarct size quantification.
The time consumption of the infarct size determination per heart (mean value of 12 representative sections of the LV) was compared between the manual and MIQuant approaches. The Δ indicates the mean value of each group. **p<0.01.