| Literature DB >> 27501792 |
Gert Reiter1, Ursula Reiter2, Gabor Kovacs3, Gabriel Adelsmayr4, Andreas Greiser5, Aurelien F Stalder5, Horst Olschewski3, Michael Fuchsjäger4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH), duration of vortical blood flow along the main pulmonary artery enables estimation of the mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) non-invasively. It remains to date not known, if this method is applicable in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and abnormal aortic-to-pulmonary shunting. CASEEntities:
Keywords: 4D blood flow; Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging; Patent ductus arteriosus; Pulmonary arterial hypertension
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27501792 PMCID: PMC4977657 DOI: 10.1186/s12880-016-0150-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Imaging ISSN: 1471-2342 Impact factor: 1.930
Timeline
| 1993: | Preterm birth (35th week of pregnancy); bronchopulmonary dysplasia; severe obstructive pulmonary disease |
| 1994: | Echocardiography: enlarged RV and RA; normal LV and LA; small PDA with left-to-right shunt |
| 2006: | Aortic angiography: PDA diameter, 3.5 mm |
| Right heart catheterization and PDA trial occlusion: mPAP, 70 mmHg; RV pressures did not significantly decrease after trial occlusion | |
| Echocardiography: RV/LV/PV diameter, 24/55/34 mm; maximal pressure gradient across PDA, 16 mmHg | |
| 2006 – 2014: | Bosentan therapy and close meshed therapy monitoring |
| 2008: | Echocardiography: RV/LV/PV diameter, 28/54/35 mm; maximal pressure gradient across PDA, 16 mmHg |
| Right heart catheterization and PDA trial occlusion: PAP, 94/53/70 mmHg; RAP, 4 mmHg. RV pressures did not significantly decrease after trial occlusion | |
| 2013: | Echocardiography: RV/LV/PV diameter, 24/59/39 mm |
| 2014: | Right heart catheterization: see |
| Cardiac MR: see | |
| since 2014: | Macitentan therapy |
PDA, patent ductus arteriosus, RV right ventricle, LV left ventricle, PV pulmonary valve, RVP systolic/diastolic/mean, right ventricular pressure, PAP systolic/diastolic/mean, pulmonary arterial pressure, RAP right atrial pressure, PAH pulmonary arterial hypertension
Fig. 14D flow evaluation of the PDA. Schematic 3D anatomy (a) of the PDA and surrounding cardiovascular structures based on 3D reconstruction of the anatomical phase contrast images. PDA length and time-averaged cross-sectional area at the center of the PDA were evaluated by multi-planar reformation. Time courses of maximal velocity (b) and net flow rate (c) across the central cross-section of the PDA demonstrate an early systolic and an early diastolic left-to-right peak and small right-to-left flow at end-systole. Velocity-color-encoded streamlines originating from PDA at early systole (d), end-systole (e) and early diastole (f) projected onto multi-planar reformatted anatomical images reflect these bi-phasic PDA flow characteristics. In early systole (d) and diastole (f) there is fast left-to-right flow through the PDA that reverses direction in the main pulmonary artery. In end-systole (e) blood spirals from right-to-left but no streamlines (and particles in Additional file 1: in the online-only Data Supplement) enter the aorta. PDA = patent ductus arteriosus; MPA = main pulmonary artery; RPA = right pulmonary artery; PV = pulmonary valve; AD = aorta descendens; AA = aorta ascendens, LV = left ventricle, RV = right ventricle, LA = left atrium
Fig. 2Vortical blood flow in the main pulmonary artery. Velocity-color-encoded streamlines (a, b, c) and 3D velocity vectors (d, e, f) projected onto multi-planar reformatted anatomical images demonstrate counter-clockwise rotating vortical blood flow nested in bi-directional pulmonary flow caused by PDA. This structure is present throughout the entire cardiac cycle (Additional file 2: in the online-only Data Supplement)
Fig. 3Typical vortical blood flow in the main pulmonary artery in a patient with pulmonary arterial hypertension (mPAP = 82 mmHg) without PDA. Velocity-color-encoded streamlines (a, b) and 3D velocity vectors (c, d) projected onto multi-planar reformatted anatomical images demonstrate clockwise rotating vortical blood flow and forward flow along the posterior wall of the main pulmonary artery