| Literature DB >> 28143574 |
Solenn Toupin1,2,3, Pierre Bour4,5,6, Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffé7, Valéry Ozenne4,5, Baudouin Denis de Senneville8, Rainer Schneider9, Alexis Vaussy7, Arnaud Chaumeil4,5,10, Hubert Cochet4,5,10, Frédéric Sacher4,5,10, Pierre Jaïs4,5,10, Bruno Quesson4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical treatment of cardiac arrhythmia by radiofrequency ablation (RFA) currently lacks quantitative and precise visualization of lesion formation in the myocardium during the procedure. This study aims at evaluating thermal dose (TD) imaging obtained from real-time magnetic resonance (MR) thermometry on the heart as a relevant indicator of the thermal lesion extent.Entities:
Keywords: Arrhythmia; Cardiac; Catheter; Electrophysiology; MR thermometry; Radiofrequency ablation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28143574 PMCID: PMC5286737 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-017-0323-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1Imaging protocol for catheter navigation (a–d) and fast CMR thermometry (e–g) for ablation monitoring. a displays photograph of the CMR-compatible catheter equipped with 2 EP electrodes (blue arrows) and 4 micro-coils (red arrows). EP signals were measured between the two electrodes and the RF current was sent through the tip electrode. The associated magnitude image (b) of the catheter in water illustrates the utility of the 4 active markers which appear hyperintense whereas the catheter body stays hypointense. An interactive sequence (c) was run during the catheter manipulation. The micro-coil position was detected and used to update the position of the bSSFP imaging slices. Catheter tip (red arrows) could be visualized and followed as shown in (d). CMR thermometry was performed using a single-shot EPI triggered on ECG (e). Up to 5 slices were acquired depending on heart cycle duration. On healthy volunteers, imaging slices were positioned in short axis orientation (4 chambers view f, blue rectangle) and surrounded by saturation slabs (image f, gray rectangles): 2 along the FoV in the phase encoding direction to limit aliasing effect and 2 parallels to the imaging slices to reduce the signal of blood. A crossed-pair navigator was positioned on the dome of the liver (image g, orange rectangle on coronal view) to monitor respiratory motion at the lung/liver interface. The echo-navigator pulse sequence was run before each slice and the detected breathing stage was used to update the position of the following slice
Fig. 2CMR thermometry evaluation on 5 healthy volunteers in short axis view. Typical results obtained on a volunteer (#5) are displayed: a averaged registered magnitude over 2 min 30 s of acquisition and (b) phase image presenting aliasing at the heart-liver-lung interface (red arrows). Temporal standard deviation σT (c) and mean μT (d) temperature maps are overlaid on averaged magnitude in a handmade ROI surrounding the all myocardium. White arrows indicate degraded CMR thermometry performance induced by remaining phase wraps. Pixels of this area with aberrant results (σT > 7 °C) were excluded from the statistical analysis presented in (e-f). Box-and-whisker plots of standard deviation σT (e) and mean μT (f) of the distribution of temperature in handmade ROIs surrounding the LV and the RV. For each graph, the levels of temperature correspond to 10% (lower horizontal bar), 25% (lower limit of the box), median value (horizontal line inside the box), 75% (upper limit of the box) and 90% (upper horizontal bar) of the distribution
Fig. 3Real-time CMR thermometry during RFA in vivo on a sheep LV. Dynamic CMR thermometry was performed in real-time during a RFA (70 W for 40 s, RFA #4 on sheep #3). a Temperature maps at t = 60 s, corresponding to 40 s of RF delivery, are overlaid on averaged registered magnitude images within a hand-drawn ROI surrounding the heating zone. Heating zone and associated TD (t = 200 s) are zoomed on (b) and (c) in a 30x30 pixels ROI. The value 1 refers to one time the lethal TD threshold equivalent to 43 °C for 240 min. d Temperature evolution in time in 5 × 5 pixels of slice #3 centered on the white arrow. Orange line depicts baseline temperature in a single pixel outside heating zone. (Additional file 1: Figure 3 shows CMR thermometry evolution every 4 dynamic repetitions)
Fig. 4Endocardial bipolar signal recorded at the tip of the MR-compatible ablation catheter in the LV of a sheep: a before the ablation and b after the ablation, showing voltage abatement
In vivo CMR thermometry results on 3 sheep. Parameters of 12 RFA are reported in this Table: the power, the duration and the energy of the RF delivery, the maximal temperature reached in the LV and the 2D dimensions of each lesion created
| Lesion sizes in 2D | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sheep # | RFA # | Power (W) | Dur. (s) | Energy (J) | Temp max (°C) | TD map (mm2) | T1-w (mm2) |
| 1 | 1 | 60 | 60 | 3600 | 30 °C | 9×4 | 9×5 |
| 2 | 60 | 90 | 5400 | 55 °C | 6.5×4 | 7×4 | |
| 3 | 70 | 100 | 7000 | 30 °C | 8×3 | 9×3 | |
| 4 | 70 | 90 | 6300 | 40 °C | 7.5×5 | 6.5×4 | |
| 2 | 1 | 60 | 60 | 3600 | 40 °C | 11×4 | 11×5 |
| 2 | 60 | 60 | 3600 | 45 °C | 12.5×6 | 11×5.5 | |
| 3 | 50 | 90 | 4500 | 35 °C | 5×8 | 6×6 | |
| 4 | 60 | 60 | 3600 | 45 °C | 10×6 | 9×5 | |
| 3 | 1 | 50 | 90 | 4500 | 55 °C | 12×10 | 10×7 |
| 2 | 50 | 60 | 3000 | 30 °C | 8×8 | 8×6 | |
| 3 | 50 | 70 | 3500 | 55 °C | 10.5×7 | 10×7 | |
| 4 | 70 | 40 | 2800 | 75 °C | 10×7 | 10×7 | |
Lesion extent maximal dimensions were measured in 2D on the cumulative TD maps and on the equivalent slice of the 3D T1-w volume
Fig. 5Comparison of lesion dimensions of one representative RFA between post-ablation T1-w 3D images (a, c and e), real-time TD map (b) and macroscopic observations with TTC staining (d and f). Cumulative TD was computed in real-time simultaneously to a RFA of 60 s at 60 W (RFA #4 on sheep #2), given the TD map (b) at the end of the procedure. After the ablation, a 3D T1-w IR volume was acquired and the created lesion could be visualized in hyper signal compared to the surrounding tissue attributed to edema. To compare 2D TD map and 3D-IR lesion sizes, the equivalent 2D slice was reconstructed from the 3D T1-w volume, resulting in the image (a, green dashed line perpendicular to other views c and e) with the same position, orientation and zoom than (b). After the intervention, the animal was euthanized and the heart was dissected to expose the lesion. The macroscopic view from the endocardium side is shown in (d) and the equivalent slice (c) was reconstructed from the 3D T1-w volume (blue dashed line perpendicular to other views a and e). The lesion sample was finally cut to expose the extent in depth in the myocardium (f) and the equivalent slice (e) was reconstructed from the 3D T1-w volume (yellow dashed line perpendicular to other views a and c)
Fig. 6RF lesion dimensions (N = 12 lesions) correlation between measurements on real-time thermal dose maps, post-ablation T1-w images and gross pathology. Pearson’s linear correlation on (a) reformatted 2D slices from T1-w IR images and TD maps (2 dimensions per lesion, N = 24), and (b) T1-w IR images and macroscopic measurements (3 dimensions per lesion, N = 36). Dimensions are colour-coded: red for largest dimensions, blue for smallest dimensions and green for depth dimensions (b and d graphs only). It must be noted that several points correspond to more than one measure, since some lesions had identical dimensions. Pearson’s correlation coefficient R and coefficients of the linear regression are indicated on the graphs. Bland and Altman representation of the agreement between the lesion dimensions of the T1-w IR images and TD maps (c) and between the T1-w IR images and gross pathology measurements (d). Dashed lines indicate 95% confidence limits