| Literature DB >> 28806996 |
Mari Nieves Velasco Forte1,2,3, Kuberan Pushparajah1,2, Tobias Schaeffter1,4, Israel Valverde Perez1,2,3, Kawal Rhode1, Bram Ruijsink1, Mazen Alhrishy1, Nicholas Byrne1, Amedeo Chiribiri1, Tevfik Ismail1, Tarique Hussain1,5, Reza Razavi1,2, Sébastien Roujol6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiac catheterization is a common procedure in patients with congenital heart disease (CHD). Although cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) represents a promising alternative approach to fluoroscopy guidance, simultaneous high contrast visualization of catheter, soft tissue and the blood pool remains challenging. In this study, a novel passive tracking technique is proposed for enhanced positive contrast visualization of gadolinium-filled balloon catheters using partial saturation (pSAT) magnetization preparation.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac catheterization; Congenital heart disease; Device tracking; Interventional CMR
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Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28806996 PMCID: PMC5556659 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-017-0368-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Image quality scoring system for visualization of cardiovascular structures
| Score | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Poor. Unable to differentiate cardiovascular structures |
| 2 | Low. Cardiovascular structures can be slightly intuited. |
| 3 | Intermediate. Cardiovascular structures can be delineated. |
| 4 | Good. Good definition of cardiovascular structures. |
| 5 | Excellent. Optimal cardiovascular structures delineation. |
Image quality scoring system for contrast between blood pool and balloon of the wedge catheter
| Score | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Poor. Impossible to differentiate balloon and blood pool. |
| 2 | Low. Differentiation of blood and balloon difficult to perform. |
| 3 | Intermediate. Adequate signal disparity. |
| 4 | Good. Differentiation of blood and balloon easily performed. |
| 5 | Excellent. Excellent contrast between blood and balloon |
Fig. 1Images acquired with the pSAT sequence in one healthy volunteer using different pSAT angles (Blue arrow = syringe, white arrow = balloon wedge catheter). Image contrast was adjusted for each image to a window with minimum of 0 and maximum equal to twice the average right ventricular blood signal. Intermediate pSAT angles of 20°-40° enabled simultaneous visualization of balloon, blood and myocardium
Fig. 2Influence of slice thickness and pSAT angle on the proposed pSAT sequence measured in healthy subjects. Data are shown as average and standard deviation over all subjects. Low pSAT angles (<20°) resulted in reduced balloon/blood CNR, while high pSAT angles (>40°) led to reduced blood and myocardium SNR. In the pSAT range of interest (20° to 40°), larger slice thicknesses resulted in higher SNRs and CNRs
Fig. 3Influence of framerate and pSAT angle on the proposed pSAT sequence measured in healthy subjects. Data are shown as average and standard deviation over all subjects. Low pSAT angles (<20°) resulted in reduced balloon/blood CNR, while high pSAT angles (>40°) led to reduced blood and myocardium SNR. In this pSAT range of interest (20° to 40°), lower framerate resulted in higher balloon, blood, and myocardium SNR, but reduced balloon/blood CNR and balloon/myocardium CNR
Fig. 4Subjective assessment of the pSAT sequence in healthy subjects. Catheter balloon/blood contrast (a), cardiovascular structure visualization (b), image suitability score for CMR-guidance (c), and ideal pSAT angle (d) are shown. In (a) and (b), scores were first averaged over all experts and are shown in average ± standard deviation over all subjects. A pSAT angle range of 20°-40° resulted in balloon/blood contrast score > 2, cardiovascular structure visualization score > 2 and image suitability for CMR-guidance in >93% of cases. The average ideal pSAT angle was 33 ± 7°
Fig. 5In-vivo analysis of the pSAT sequence in one patient undergoing CMR-guided catheterization. The catheter was positioned at the proximal inferior vena cava (arrow). a Images acquired using the pSAT sequence with different pSAT angles. Image contrast was adjusted for each image to a window with minimum of 0 and maximum equal to twice the average right ventricular blood signal. b-e Qualitative assessment of the pSAT sequence including catheter balloon/blood contrast (b), cardiovascular structure visualisation score (c), image suitability score for CMR-guidance (d), and ideal pSAT angle (e). A pSAT angle range of 10°-30° resulted in balloon/blood score > 2, cardiovascular structure visualization score > 2 and image suitability for CMR-guidance in 100% of cases. The average ideal pSAT angle was 27 ± 6°
Fig. 6Real-time images acquired in two patients during CMR-guided catheterization using the pSAT sequence with a pSAT angle of 30° (patient #1, a-c) and 40° (patient #2, d-f). Note balloon of the wedge catheter (see white arrow) at the inferior vena cava (a), main pulmonary artery (b) and left pulmonary wedge (c) in patient 1; and in the IVC (d) and LPA (e, f) in patient #2. Simultaneous visualization of catheter balloon and blood/heart structures was achieved with enhanced contrast and SNR using the proposed sequence