Literature DB >> 31607265

Decreased rotational flow and circumferential wall shear stress as early markers of descending aorta dilation in Marfan syndrome: a 4D flow CMR study.

A Guala1, G Teixido-Tura2, L Dux-Santoy1, C Granato1, A Ruiz-Muñoz1, F Valente1, L Galian-Gay1, L Gutiérrez1, T González-Alujas1, K M Johnson3, O Wieben3, A Sao Avilés1, A Evangelista1, J Rodriguez-Palomares1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diseases of the descending aorta have emerged as a clinical issue in Marfan syndrome following improvements in proximal aorta surgical treatment and the consequent increase in life expectancy. Although a role for hemodynamic alterations in the etiology of descending aorta disease in Marfan patients has been suggested, whether flow characteristics may be useful as early markers remains to be determined.
METHODS: Seventy-five Marfan patients and 48 healthy subjects were prospectively enrolled. In- and through-plane vortexes were computed by 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in the thoracic aorta through the quantification of in-plane rotational flow and systolic flow reversal ratio, respectively. Regional pulse wave velocity and axial and circumferential wall shear stress maps were also computed.
RESULTS: In-plane rotational flow and circumferential wall shear stress were reduced in Marfan patients in the distal ascending aorta and in proximal descending aorta, even in the 20 patients free of aortic dilation. Multivariate analysis showed reduced in-plane rotational flow to be independently related to descending aorta pulse wave velocity. Conversely, systolic flow reversal ratio and axial wall shear stress were altered in unselected Marfan patients but not in the subgroup without dilation. In multivariate regression analysis proximal descending aorta axial (p = 0.014) and circumferential (p = 0.034) wall shear stress were independently related to local diameter.
CONCLUSIONS: Reduced rotational flow is present in the aorta of Marfan patients even in the absence of dilation, is related to aortic stiffness and drives abnormal circumferential wall shear stress. Axial and circumferential wall shear stress are independently related to proximal descending aorta dilation beyond clinical factors. In-plane rotational flow and circumferential wall shear stress may be considered as an early marker of descending aorta dilation in Marfan patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  4D flow CMR; Aortic aneurysm; Descending aorta; Helical flow; Marfan syndrome; Wall shear stress (WSS)

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31607265      PMCID: PMC6791020          DOI: 10.1186/s12968-019-0572-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson        ISSN: 1097-6647            Impact factor:   5.364


Introduction

Marfan syndrome is a hereditary connective tissue disorder caused by a mutation in the FBN1 gene. The remarkable advances in diagnosis, treatment and elective aortic root replacement resulted in a great reduction in proximal aorta fatal events in Marfan patients [1, 2], prompting an impressive rise in life expectancy [3]. As a result, diseases of the descending aorta (DAo) have emerged as a clinical issue, either in the form of a primary complication of the DAo or in the follow-up of patients with previous surgical prophylactic ascending aorta replacement [1, 2, 4]. Longitudinal data in Marfan patients showed that 63% of aortic dissections involved the distal aorta, in 31% of which the involvement was exclusive [4]. Although aortic diameter has been identified as a risk marker for DAo complications [1, 2, 4], 47% of type B aortic dissections occur with DAo diameter < 27 mm [1]. As a consequence, other risk markers beyond aortic diameter are needed to better define the risk of DAo complications in these patients [4]. For this purpose, 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) studies evaluating hemodynamics and wall shear stress (WSS) have recently been conducted. Wang et al. reported reduced helical flow in the aortic root in MFS patients [5], while other studies demonstrated the role of proximal DAo vortexes in the creation of areas of low WSS localized in the proximal DAo [6-8], which were related to local dilation [6] in a region where most type B dissections occur [6]. However, several aspects have not been investigated to date. Firstly, no study made a quantitative evaluation of these flow abnormalities. Thus, previous semi-quantitative analyses were limited for differentiating a pathologic from a physiologic proximal DAo vortex [6, 9], and characterizing these vortexes in terms of direction and intensity. Moreover, no studies to date have evaluated these flow disturbances in MFS without aortic dilation, thereby limiting the possibility of assessing whether these flow characteristics may be early markers of aortic disease. We aimed to investigate blood flow and WSS patterns by 4D flow CMR in the thoracic aorta of Marfan patients with and without aortic dilation to identify potential early markers of DAo disease.

Methods

Study population

Seventy-five genetically-confirmed Marfan syndrome patients were prospectively recruited from our Aortic Unit. Inclusion criteria were: age > 18 years and absence of bicuspid aortic valve, significant valve dysfunction (aortic regurgitation and stenosis) and previous heart or aortic surgery and contraindication for CMR . Furthermore, 48 healthy subjects were recruited as controls. The study was approved by the local ethics committee and written informed consent was obtained from all participants.

Cardiovascular magnetic resonance protocol

CMR studies were performed on a clinical 1.5 T scanner (Signa, GE Healthcare, Waukesha, Wisconsin , USA). The protocol included balanced steady-state free-precession (bSSFP) cine imaging to assess aortic diameter, 2D phase contrast images of the aortic valve to evaluate aortic valve disease and a 4D phase-contrast CMR (4D flow CMR) acquisition for hemodynamics analysis. A radially-undersampled acquisition (PC VIPR) with 5-point balanced velocity encoding [10] with retrospective electrocardiogram (ECG)-gating during free-breathing was used for 4D flow imaging of the entire thoracic aorta in ≈ 10 min total scan time. Data were acquired with an eight-channel cardiac coil (HD Cardiac, GE Healthcare) using the following parameters: velocity encoding (VENC) 200 cm/s, field of view 400x400x400 mm, acquisition matrix 160x160x160, voxel size 2.5 × 2.5 × 2.5 mm. This data set was reconstructed offline according to the nominal temporal resolution (5xTR) of each patient, yielding a temporal resolution of 25.5 ± 5 ms. Data were corrected for background phase from concomitant gradients, eddy currents and trajectory errors of the 3D radial acquired k-space [10]. Brachial systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) pressures were taken immediately after the CMR study.

Hemodynamics evaluation

Patient-specific 3D geometric models of the aorta were semi-automatically reconstructed from Phase Contrast Magnetic Resonance Angiograms (PC MRA) using ITK-Snap [11] and used to mask the velocity data. PC MRA was used to identify the sinotubular junction (STJ), first and last supra-aortic vessels and location of the pulmonary artery bifurcation. The height of the pulmonary artery bifurcation served to separate proximal and distal regions of both ascending (AAo) and DAo. Aortic centerline was computed and 20 perpendicular analysis planes were identified between the STJ and end of the proximal DAo. Eight equidistant analysis planes were located in the AAo, 4 in the aortic arch and 8 in the proximal DAo, yielding average distances between analysis planes of 10 mm in the AAo, 7.2 mm in aortic arch and 7.4 mm in the proximal DAo. Hemodynamics characterization was made in each plane using custom-designed Matlab (Mathworks, Natick, Massachusetts,USA) code. In-plane rotational flow (IRF), also called circumferential circulation [12], a widely-used marker, was quantified using circulation, a parameter used in fluid dynamics to quantify flow rotation. IRF is a surrogate marker of helical flow that quantifies its circumferential part by isolating the rotational component of the velocity field residing in the plane [13]. In-plane rotational flow was computed at peak systole, averaging through one time frame before and two frames after peak systole to mitigate noise. Systolic flow reversal ratio (SFRR) was calculated as the ratio of forward to backward through-plane systolic volumes [14]. This parameter, also known as systolic backward flow, offers quantification of the strength of vortexes rotating around an axis perpendicular to the centerline. Figure 1 permits visualization of the differences between in-plane (IRF) and through-plane (SFRR) flow rotation patterns in a representative Marfan patient with proximal DAo dilation. The maximum through-plane velocity at the STJ was also extracted.
Fig. 1

Flow field visualization. Top: visualization of the velocity field as a series of sagittal images showing flow streamlines at four successive systolic time frames (from a to d, 27 ms time step) of a representative Marfan patient with dilation of the proximal descending aorta (DAo). Streamline visualization was obtained with CVI42, Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc., Calgary, Canada. Bottom: through-plane (red, backward with |velocity| > 10 cm/s; blue, forward with |velocity| > 10 cm/s) and in-plane (red, higher velocity, same velocity scale as top boxes.) velocity components of a proximal DAo section of the same patient. B = back, F = front, I = inner, IRV = in-plane rotational flow, O = outer,SFRR = systolic flow reversal ratio

Flow field visualization. Top: visualization of the velocity field as a series of sagittal images showing flow streamlines at four successive systolic time frames (from a to d, 27 ms time step) of a representative Marfan patient with dilation of the proximal descending aorta (DAo). Streamline visualization was obtained with CVI42, Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc., Calgary, Canada. Bottom: through-plane (red, backward with |velocity| > 10 cm/s; blue, forward with |velocity| > 10 cm/s) and in-plane (red, higher velocity, same velocity scale as top boxes.) velocity components of a proximal DAo section of the same patient. B = back, F = front, I = inner, IRV = in-plane rotational flow, O = outer,SFRR = systolic flow reversal ratio Axial and circumferential WSS were computed as previously described [15, 16]. In order to compute population-averaged WSS maps, axial and circumferential WSS were averaged at 8 regions around the lumen contour of each cross-sectional plane. Data were aligned for all patients using the inner aortic curvature as a reference. Axial and circumferential WSS were averaged over meaningful regions to test whether they are independently related to proximal DAo diameter. Axial WSS was averaged in the left/left-inner region of the proximal DAo (planes 14 and 15, where dilation is most likely to be present), while circumferential WSS was averaged on the circular section 14. Thus, averaging was made in the region where the peak curvature and most flow abnormalities are seen [7].

Aortic mechanical properties

Regional aortic pulse wave velocity was computed separately in the ascending and descending aorta as previously described [17]. Briefly, local velocity waveforms were extracted at 100 equally-distributed analysis planes and transit time was calculated by wavelet analysis as recently proposed [18].

Aortic diameters and definitions of dilation

The three cusp-to-cusp diameters were measured at the aortic root level at the end-diastolic frame and the maximum was considered for analysis. Aortic root dilation was considered when z-score, based on age, body surface area (BSA) and sex as reported by Devereux et al. [19], was > 2. Diameter of the DAo at pulmonary artery level was extracted from PC MRA. DAo dilation was defined as a diameter > 90th percentile of the sex-, age- and BSA-matched population published by Rogers et al. [20]. The non-dilated MFS subgroup included patients not presenting with dilation of either the aortic root or the DAo.

Aortic valve disease

PC images of the aortic valve were used to evaluate aortic valve disease. Aortic valve stenosis was evaluated by extracting the maximum velocity and aortic valve regurgitation via regurgitant fraction.

Statistical analysis

Continuous demographic variables were expressed as mean ± standard deviation if they presented a normal distribution, and as median [1st-3rd] quartiles otherwise. Categorical variables were presented as frequency (percentage). The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test was used to evaluate distribution normality. Differences between groups for continuous parameters were assessed by Student’s t-test if normally distributed, and Mann-Whitney U test otherwise. Chi-square test was used for categorical variables. Multivariate linear or logistic regression analyses with a backward selection procedure and multicollinearity test were used to identify statistically-significant associations. Independent variables entered the model if p < 0.15 in univariate analyses. A two-tailed p value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. SPSS 21.0 (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences, International Business Machines, Inc., Armonk, New York, USA) was used for the analysis.

Results

Demographic characteristics

Demographic characteristics, aortic diameters and regional aortic stiffness in healthy subjects and Marfan patients with and without aortic dilation are shown in Table 1.
Table 1

Demographics and clinical data

Healthy SubjectsMarfan patients
ALL Non-dilated MarfanDilated Marfan
N4875p-values20p-values55p-values
age [years]39 ± 1237 ± 130.32734 ± 100.10438 ± 140.611
Sex [N, (%) men]31 (65)42 (56)0.0265 (25)0.00237 (67)0.165
Height [cm]172 ± 8180 ± 11< 0.001177 ± 90.024182 ± 11< 0.001
BSA [m2]1.84 ± 0.161.91 ± 0.220.0521.85 ± 0.220.9311.95 ± 0.220.011
SBP [mmHg]126 ± 18128 ± 170.523130 ± 150.381128 ± 180.704
DBP [mmHg]70 ± 1274 ± 120.06976 ± 110.05174 ± 120.176
AoV regurgitant fraction [%]1 ± 12 ± 50.0871 ± 10.5933 ± 50.035
AoV peak velocity [m/s]1.2 ± 0.21.1 ± 0.20.0671.1 ± 0.20.0571.1 ± 0.30.122
Aortic root diameter [mm]30.0 ± 4.038.6 ± 5.0< 0.00134.0 ± 3.1< 0.00140.3 ± 4.7< 0.001
Aortic root z-score−0.73 ± 1.062.32 ± 1.99< 0.0010.69 ± 0.94< 0.0012.88 ± 1.79< 0.001
AAo diameter [mm]30.2 ± 4.135.2 ± 6.4< 0.00130.1 ± 6.10.95837.1 ± 5.8< 0.001
Proximal DAo diameter [mm]23.2 ± 2.925.1 ± 4.40.00922.2 ± 2.10.17426.2 ± 4.5< 0.001
AAo PWV [m/s]5.3 ± 1.97.3 ± 2.8< 0.0017.1 ± 2.20.0027.3 ± 3.0< 0.001
DAo PWV [m/s]7.2 ± 2.210.8 ± 4.5< 0.00110.2 ± 4.0< 0.00111.1 ± 4.6< 0.001

Demographic characteristics, aortic diameters and ascending and descending pulse wave velocities (PWV) of healthy volunteers (HV), Marfan patients (ALL MFS) and the subset of Marfan patients with neither aortic root nor descending aorta dilation (Non-dilated Marfan). SBP, DBP: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. AAo represents ascending and DAo descending aorta. Data are presented as mean ± SD or number (percentage). P-values report the comparison with healthy controls

Demographics and clinical data Demographic characteristics, aortic diameters and ascending and descending pulse wave velocities (PWV) of healthy volunteers (HV), Marfan patients (ALL MFS) and the subset of Marfan patients with neither aortic root nor descending aorta dilation (Non-dilated Marfan). SBP, DBP: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. AAo represents ascending and DAo descending aorta. Data are presented as mean ± SD or number (percentage). P-values report the comparison with healthy controls As expected, Marfan patients had larger aortic root and AAo and DAo diameters. Twenty Marfan patients free of dilation of the aortic root and the proximal DAo were grouped as non-dilated Marfan subjects. Non-dilated Marfan had larger aortic root diameter compared with healthy subjects; however, aortic root z-score was low and within normal range. DBP was slightly but not significantly higher in Marfan compared to healthy subjects . Mean aortic valve regurgitant fraction and maximum velocity were slightly higher and lower, respectively, in Marfan compared to healthy subjects . However, differences were clinically insignificant since the values fell within normal range. As previously reported [17, 21, 22], Marfarn patients presented increased AAo and DAo stiffness (measured here as an increase in pulse wave velocity) compared with healthy subjects, even in the absence of dilation.

Hemodynamics

IRF, which is the in-plane projection of helical flow, was substantially lower in Marfan patients at the distal AAo, aortic arch and proximal DAo (see top-left panel of Fig. 2 and Additional file 1: Table S1). Differences were statistically-significant in most planes between distal AAo and proximal DAo, even after the inclusion in multivariate analysis of sex, height, BSA, DBP, aortic valve regurgitant fraction and maximum velocity as independent variables. Interestingly, Marfan transitioned from clockwise to counter-clockwise rotation (i.e. from positive to negative IRF) in the middle of the proximal DAo. Conversely, in healthy subjects , IRF was progressively reduced when moving distally, without presenting inversion of rotation direction, at least before pulmonary bifurcation level. SFRR, also called systolic backward flow being a measurement of backward systolic flow and thus systolic through-plane vorticity, tended to be higher in Marfan compared to healthy subjects in the proximal AAo and DAo, but not in the aortic arch (see bottom-left panel of Fig. 2). However, on multivariate analysis, none of these tendencies reached statistical significance.
Fig. 2

Rotational flow characteristics. In-plane rotational flow (IRF) (top) and systolic flow reversal ratio (SFRR) (bottom) at the 20 analysis planes. Blue lines and box plots present data for healthy subjects, red regards all Marfan syndrome patients (left) while green reports data from non-dilated Marfan syndrome patients (right).* Statistically-significant (p < 0.05) difference between the groups after multivariate corrections

Rotational flow characteristics. In-plane rotational flow (IRF) (top) and systolic flow reversal ratio (SFRR) (bottom) at the 20 analysis planes. Blue lines and box plots present data for healthy subjects, red regards all Marfan syndrome patients (left) while green reports data from non-dilated Marfan syndrome patients (right).* Statistically-significant (p < 0.05) difference between the groups after multivariate corrections Interestingly, even the subset of 20 Marfan patients without aortic dilation presented a markedly lower IRF at the distal AAo and proximal DAo compared to healthy subjects (see top-right panel of Fig. 2). These differences were statistically-significant on multivariate analysis after inclusion of sex, age, height, DBP, aortic root diameter and aortic valve regurgitant fraction and maximum velocity as independent variables. This means that a reduction in in-plane rotational flow is present in Marfan without clinically-significant aortic dilation. Conversely, SFRR was lower in non-dilated Marfan patients, thereby suggesting that the increase in such a flow alteration may partially result from dilation. In univariate analysis in all Marfan patients, average IRF over the ascending aorta, aortic arch and proximal descending aorta was related to BSA (R = 0.28), maximum velocity at the sinotubular junction (R = 0.270) and DAo PWV (R = -0.30) but not with age, sex, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, aortic root z-score and AAo PWV (see Table 2). In multivariate analysis corrected for BSA and maximum velocity at the sinotubular junction, average IRF was independently related to DAo PWV (p = 0.041).
Table 2

univariate and multivariate linear regression analysis for thoracic aorta mean IRF in Marfan patients

UnivariateMultivariate
p-valuep-valueBIC
Age [years]0.637
BSA [m2]0.0200.0470.235[−0.129;17.528]
Sex [male]0.110
SBP [mmHg]0.117
DBP [mmHg]0.438
Aortic root z-score0.203
Vmax [cm/s]0.0200.0500.231[0.000; 0.138]
AAo PWV [m/s]0.165
DAo PWV [m/s]0.0130.041−0.232[−0.875; −0.019]

SBP, DBP: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. AAo represents ascending and DAo descending aorta, Vmax is the maximum through-plane velocity at the sinotubular junction and PWV means pulse wave velocity

univariate and multivariate linear regression analysis for thoracic aorta mean IRF in Marfan patients SBP, DBP: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. AAo represents ascending and DAo descending aorta, Vmax is the maximum through-plane velocity at the sinotubular junction and PWV means pulse wave velocity

Axial and circumferential WSS maps

Axial WSS maps showed lower values in Marfan patients compared to healthy subjects in the proximal AAo, especially in the outer region, and in the left-inner region of the proximal DAo (see top row of Fig. 3). Circumferential WSS was reduced in Marfan patients in the left-outer regions of the distal AAo and proximal aortic arch and in the left-inner regions of the proximal DAo (see bottom row of Fig. 3). Regions of statistically-significant differences in multivariate analysis are shown in the right panel of Fig. 3.
Fig. 3

WSS maps in healthy subjects and in Marfan patients. Axial (top) and circumferential (bottom) wall shear stress (WSS) in the ascending aorta, aortic arch and proximal descending aorta in healthy subjects (left) and in Marfan patients (center). (Right) Statistically-significance differences (p < 0.05) maps after multivariate corrections (red = healthy subjects higher, blue = Marfan higher)

WSS maps in healthy subjects and in Marfan patients. Axial (top) and circumferential (bottom) wall shear stress (WSS) in the ascending aorta, aortic arch and proximal descending aorta in healthy subjects (left) and in Marfan patients (center). (Right) Statistically-significance differences (p < 0.05) maps after multivariate corrections (red = healthy subjects higher, blue = Marfan higher) Non-dilated Marfan patients presented limited regions of altered axial or circumferential WSS in the proximal AAo compared to HV (see Fig. 4). The reduction in circumferential but not axial WSS was statistically-significant in the left/inner regions of the proximal DAo on multivariate analysis.
Fig. 4

WSS maps in healthy subjects and in non-dilated Marfan patients Axial (top) and circumferential (bottom) wall shear stress (WSS) in the ascending aorta, aortic arch and proximal descending aorta in healthy subjects (left) and in Marfan patients without aortic dilation (center). (Right) Statistically-significance differences (p < 0.05) maps after multivariate corrections (red = healthy subjectshigher, blue = Marfan higher)

WSS maps in healthy subjects and in non-dilated Marfan patients Axial (top) and circumferential (bottom) wall shear stress (WSS) in the ascending aorta, aortic arch and proximal descending aorta in healthy subjects (left) and in Marfan patients without aortic dilation (center). (Right) Statistically-significance differences (p < 0.05) maps after multivariate corrections (red = healthy subjectshigher, blue = Marfan higher) Mean axial WSS in the left/left-inner region in the proximal DAo was lower in MFS patients compared with healthy subjects(0.315 vs 0.429 N/m2, respectively, p = 0.010), even after multivariate adjustment (p = 0.018). However, though similar, the difference with healthy subjects was not statistically-significant (0.309 N/m2, p = 0.065) in non-dilated Marfan. Contour-averaged circumferential WSS in the proximal DAo was strongly related to local IRF (R = 0.805, p < 0.001) and was reduced in the overall Marfan cohort (0.021 vs. 0.065 N/m2, respectively. p < 0.001) and in the non-dilated group (0.028 N/m2, p = 0.024) compared to healthy subjects , even after multivariate adjustments (p = 0.001 and p = 0.042, respectively).

Multivariate determinants of proximal DAo diameter

Univariate and multivariate correlates of DAo maximum diameter are described in Table 3. In multivariate analysis, local contour-averaged circumferential WSS (p = 0.034) and axial WSS in the inner wall (p = 0.014) were significantly and independently related to maximum proximal DAo diameter after correction for age and BSA (see Table 3). Of note, the performance of the multivariate model was very good, with an adjusted R2 of 54%.
Table 3

univariate and multivariate linear regression analysis for proximal DAo maximum diameter in MFS patients

UnivariateMultivariate
p-valuep-valueBIC
Age [years]< 0.001< 0.0010.583[0.136; 0.247]
BSA [m2]0.020< 0.0010.416[4.815;11.326]
SBP [mmHg]0.007
DBP [mmHg]0.421
Aortic root diameter [mm]0.048
AAo PWV [m/s]0.421
DAo PWV [m/s]0.044
Circ. WSS140.0210.034−0.182[−37.4; −1.5]
Proximal DAo inner axial WSS0.0190.014−0.218[−9.2; −1.1]

SBP, DBP: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. AAo represents ascending and DAo descending aorta, PWV means pulse wave velocity and WSS wall shear stress

univariate and multivariate linear regression analysis for proximal DAo maximum diameter in MFS patients SBP, DBP: systolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. AAo represents ascending and DAo descending aorta, PWV means pulse wave velocity and WSS wall shear stress

Discussion

This study analyzed blood flow and WSS patterns as well as aortic stiffness by 4D flow CMR in the thoracic aorta of a large cohort of Marfan patients with and without aortic dilation to identify potential early markers of descending aorta disease. To our knowledge, this is the first study to quantitatively evaluate all these interrelated aspects in Marfarn patients. Vortexes in the proximal DAo of unselected Marfan adults were found to differ from those of healthy individuals. These vortexes were characterized by a large reduction in in-plane rotational flow (IRF, the in-plane projection of helical flow) in the distal ascending aorta, aortic arch and proximal DAo and a limited increase in through-plane vortexes (SFRR) located in dilation regions. Moreover, IRF but not SFRR was impaired in Marfan patients without aortic root or DAo dilation (see Additional file 2: Video 1). Similar results were obtained for wall shear stress, the circumferential, but not axial, component of which was reduced even in non-dilated patients. A marked, positive relationship between in-plane rotational flow and circumferential WSS was observed, as expected. Indeed, viscous and inertial forces tend to render the velocity field between innermost (where most of the voxels included in IRF computation are located) and outermost layers, where WSS is calculated, uniform. This positive relationship had already been reported or at least suggested by a number of studies [23-25], which emphasized the role of helical flow-induced WSS to limit platelet activation, atherogenic lipid adhesion and energy dissipation [26, 27]. Finally, in multivariate analysis corrected for age and BSA, both local circumferential and axial WSS in the proximal DAo were significantly and independently related to local diameter. Additional file 2: Representative video comparing a dilated Marfan patient (right), a non-dilated Marfan patient (center) and a healthy controls (left). (MP4 8940 kb) Vortexes in the proximal DAo of adolescent Marfan patients were recently identified by semi-qualitative visual inspection of 4D flow CMR studies [6-8]. However, none of those studies differentiated between rotation axis directions [6-8]. Interestingly, the present study found increased systolic flow reversal ratio (SFRR) to be absent in non-dilated Marfan patients, thereby indicating that through-plane vortexes might be a consequence of local dilation. On the other hand, in-plane vortexes, as identified through the computation of in-plane rotational flow, were found to be reduced in the distal AAo and aortic arch. This concurs with a quantitative study reporting reduced helical flow in the AAo in a small population of adult Marfan patients [5]. Our data further showed the reduction in IRF to be highly related to a reduction in circumferential WSS, occur even in non-dilated Marfan patients and be independently related to aortic stiffness. To appreciate the significance of this finding, it is important to consider the physiologic role of helical flow. Indeed, it is thought to limit the separation of flow from the arterial wall when flowing through regions with sudden geometric or mechanical heterogeneity (such as bifurcations), thereby limiting energy dissipation [23–25, 28]. In other words, a coherent helical flow pattern results from evolution aimed at obtaining more efficient blood flow [24, 25, 29]. In light of this, impaired IRF, a proxy of helical flow, in Marfan patients could effectively be seen as a pathologic characteristic. Regarding the origin of impaired helical flow in Marfan patients, our data revealed an independent inverse relationship with descending aorta stiffness and not with aortic root z-score and age, thereby suggesting a role for aortic stiffness in the creation of this abnormal flow feature. Of note, reduced IRF highlights a difference with respect to bicuspid aortic valve patients who present abnormally elevated IRF [13, 15]. Interestingly, helical flow rotated counterclockwise in the middle of the proximal DAo in Marfan patients, the site of maximum diameter. Counterclockwise rotational flow has been suggested as a more severe flow alteration in bicuspid aortic valve patients [30]. WSS maps revealed axial WSS to be reduced in the dilation-affected regions. However, comparing non-dilated Marfan patients with healthy subjects showed a limited number of regions with statistically-significant differences in axial WSS. By contrast, circumferential WSS was reduced in both dilated and non-dilated Marfan patients and may thus be an early marker of disease. The reduction in axial and circumferential WSS seen in the present study supports previous findings in a much smaller Marfarn population [5]. Multivariate analysis showed circumferential and axial WSS to be independent correlates of proximal DAo diameter beyond age, BSA and regional stiffness. This result adds to previous findings [6] with respect to the vectorial nature of WSS, and further suggests that local hemodynamics may be superior to local stiffness in the etiology of DAo dilation. Despite the need for longitudinal studies to demonstrate a potential causative role, these data suggest that the WSS measurement may be important in the clinical management of Marfarn patients and deserve further longitudinal studies.

Limitations

IRF and WSS were computed by averaging the flow field of three time frames around peak systole [15]. This method permits noise the reduction but can result in extremely rapid fluctuations being missed. Furthermore, as IRF is computed over the whole cross-section, the topology of local secondary flow structures could not be depicted. The 4D flow studies were acquired without respiratory gating. This should not imply substantial differences in the descending aorta, where respiratory motion is limited [31], especially during tidal breathing [32], as in the present investigation. The cross-sectional nature of the study implies the impossibility of investigating causal relationship between variables. The capacity of IRF and circumferential WSS to predict outcomes should thus be assessed in longitudinal studies.

Conclusions

Impaired in-plane rotational flow and circumferential wall shear stress are present in Marfan patients regardless of aortic dilation. Reduced axial and circumferential wall shear stress in the proximal descending aorta are independently related to local diameter beyond demographics and classic clinical factors. Numerical results included in Fig. 2.(DOCX 27 kb)
  30 in total

1.  Normal limits in relation to age, body size and gender of two-dimensional echocardiographic aortic root dimensions in persons ≥15 years of age.

Authors:  Richard B Devereux; Giovanni de Simone; Donna K Arnett; Lyle G Best; Eric Boerwinkle; Barbara V Howard; Dalane Kitzman; Elisa T Lee; Thomas H Mosley; Alan Weder; Mary J Roman
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  2012-07-06       Impact factor: 2.778

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3.  Dissection in Marfan syndrome: the importance of the descending aorta.

Authors:  Lea Mimoun; Delphine Detaint; Dalil Hamroun; Florence Arnoult; Gabriel Delorme; Mathieu Gautier; Olivier Milleron; Catherine Meuleman; François Raoux; Catherine Boileau; Alec Vahanian; Guillaume Jondeau
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2010-12-08       Impact factor: 29.983

4.  Aortic flow patterns in patients with Marfan syndrome assessed by flow-sensitive four-dimensional MRI.

Authors:  Julia Geiger; Michael Markl; Lena Herzer; Daniel Hirtler; Florian Loeffelbein; Brigitte Stiller; Mathias Langer; Raoul Arnold
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2011-11-16       Impact factor: 4.813

5.  Increased rotational flow in the proximal aortic arch is associated with its dilation in bicuspid aortic valve disease.

Authors:  Lydia Dux-Santoy; Andrea Guala; Gisela Teixidó-Turà; Aroa Ruiz-Muñoz; Giuliana Maldonado; Nicolás Villalva; Laura Galian; Filipa Valente; Laura Gutiérrez; Teresa González-Alujas; Augusto Sao-Avilés; Kevin M Johnson; Oliver Wieben; Marina Huguet; David García-Dorado; Arturo Evangelista; José F Rodríguez-Palomares
Journal:  Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2019-12-01       Impact factor: 6.875

6.  Evaluation of the effect of a concurrent chronic total occlusion on long-term mortality and left ventricular function in patients after primary percutaneous coronary intervention.

Authors:  Bimmer E P M Claessen; René J van der Schaaf; Niels J Verouden; Nienke K Stegenga; Annemarie E Engstrom; Krischan D Sjauw; Wouter J Kikkert; Marije M Vis; Jan Baan; Karel T Koch; Robbert J de Winter; Jan G P Tijssen; Jan J Piek; José P S Henriques
Journal:  JACC Cardiovasc Interv       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 11.195

7.  Life expectancy in the Marfan syndrome.

Authors:  D I Silverman; K J Burton; J Gray; M S Bosner; N T Kouchoukos; M J Roman; M Boxer; R B Devereux; P Tsipouras
Journal:  Am J Cardiol       Date:  1995-01-15       Impact factor: 2.778

8.  Improved 3D phase contrast MRI with off-resonance corrected dual echo VIPR.

Authors:  Kevin M Johnson; Darren P Lum; Patrick A Turski; Walter F Block; Charles A Mistretta; Oliver Wieben
Journal:  Magn Reson Med       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 4.668

9.  Does altered aortic flow in marfan syndrome relate to aortic root dilatation?

Authors:  Hung-Hsuan Wang; Hsin-Hui Chiu; Wen-Yih Isaac Tseng; Hsu-Hsia Peng
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2016-02-08       Impact factor: 4.813

10.  Aortic flow patterns and wall shear stress maps by 4D-flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance in the assessment of aortic dilatation in bicuspid aortic valve disease.

Authors:  José Fernando Rodríguez-Palomares; Lydia Dux-Santoy; Andrea Guala; Raquel Kale; Giuliana Maldonado; Gisela Teixidó-Turà; Laura Galian; Marina Huguet; Filipa Valente; Laura Gutiérrez; Teresa González-Alujas; Kevin M Johnson; Oliver Wieben; David García-Dorado; Arturo Evangelista
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson       Date:  2018-04-26       Impact factor: 5.364

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  9 in total

1.  Leaflet fusion length is associated with aortic dilation and flow alterations in non-dysfunctional bicuspid aortic valve.

Authors:  Andrea Guala; Arturo Evangelista; Gisela Teixido-Tura; Lucia La Mura; Lydia Dux-Santoy; Aroa Ruiz-Muñoz; Filipa Valente; Laura Galian-Gay; Laura Gutiérrez; Teresa González-Alujas; Ilaria Dentamaro; Kevin M Johnson; Oliver Wieben; Augusto Sao Avilés; Ignacio Ferreira-Gonzalez; Jose F Rodríguez-Palomares
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2021-05-12       Impact factor: 5.315

2.  Impact of ascending aortic prosthetic grafts on early postoperative descending aortic biomechanics on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging.

Authors:  Maria C Palumbo; Alberto Redaelli; Matthew Wingo; Katherine A Tak; Jeremy R Leonard; Jiwon Kim; Lisa Q Rong; Christine Park; Hannah W Mitlak; Richard B Devereux; Mary J Roman; Arindam RoyChoudury; Christopher Lau; Mario F L Gaudino; Leonard N Girardi; Jonathan W Weinsaft
Journal:  Eur J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2022-03-24       Impact factor: 4.191

3.  Abnormal aortic hemodynamics are associated with risk factors for aortic complications in patients with marfan syndrome.

Authors:  Mitzi M van Andel; Pim van Ooij; Vivian de Waard; Lukas M Gottwald; Roland R J van Kimmenade; Arthur J Scholte; Michael G Dickinson; Aeilko H Zwinderman; Barbara J M Mulder; Aart J Nederveen; Maarten Groenink
Journal:  Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc       Date:  2022-10-17

Review 4.  Potential predictors of severe cardiovascular involvement in Marfan syndrome: the emphasized role of genotype-phenotype correlations in improving risk stratification-a literature review.

Authors:  Zoltán Szabolcs; Kálmán Benke; Roland Stengl; Bence Ágg; Miklós Pólos; Gábor Mátyás; Gábor Szabó; Béla Merkely; Tamás Radovits
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2021-05-31       Impact factor: 4.123

Review 5.  Marfan syndrome.

Authors:  Dianna M Milewicz; Alan C Braverman; Julie De Backer; Shaine A Morris; Catherine Boileau; Irene H Maumenee; Guillaume Jondeau; Arturo Evangelista; Reed E Pyeritz
Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2021-09-02       Impact factor: 65.038

6.  Fully quantitative mapping of abnormal aortic velocity and wall shear stress direction in patients with bicuspid aortic valves and repaired coarctation using 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance.

Authors:  Pim van Ooij; Emile S Farag; Carmen P S Blanken; Aart J Nederveen; Maarten Groenink; R Nils Planken; S Matthijs Boekholdt
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson       Date:  2021-02-15       Impact factor: 5.364

7.  Low and Oscillatory Wall Shear Stress Is Not Related to Aortic Dilation in Patients With Bicuspid Aortic Valve: A Time-Resolved 3-Dimensional Phase-Contrast Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study.

Authors:  Lydia Dux-Santoy; Andrea Guala; Julio Sotelo; Sergio Uribe; Gisela Teixidó-Turà; Aroa Ruiz-Muñoz; Daniel E Hurtado; Filipa Valente; Laura Galian-Gay; Laura Gutiérrez; Teresa González-Alujas; Kevin M Johnson; Oliver Wieben; Ignacio Ferreira; Arturo Evangelista; José F Rodríguez-Palomares
Journal:  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol       Date:  2019-12-05       Impact factor: 8.311

8.  False lumen rotational flow and aortic stiffness are associated with aortic growth rate in patients with chronic aortic dissection of the descending aorta: a 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance study.

Authors:  Aroa Ruiz-Muñoz; Andrea Guala; Lydia Dux-Santoy; Gisela Teixidó-Turà; Maria Luz Servato; Filipa Valente; Juan Garrido-Oliver; Laura Galian-Gay; Laura Gutiérrez; Rubén Fernandez-Galera; Guillem Casas; Teresa González-Alujas; Hug Cuéllar-Calabria; Kevin M Johnson; Oliver Wieben; Ignacio Ferreira-Gonzalez; Arturo Evangelista; Jose Rodriguez-Palomares
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Magn Reson       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 6.903

9.  2D Projection Maps of WSS and OSI Reveal Distinct Spatiotemporal Changes in Hemodynamics in the Murine Aorta during Ageing and Atherosclerosis.

Authors:  Kristina Andelovic; Patrick Winter; Thomas Kampf; Anton Xu; Peter Michael Jakob; Volker Herold; Wolfgang Rudolf Bauer; Alma Zernecke
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2021-12-07
  9 in total

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