| Literature DB >> 32907587 |
Thomas P Craven1, Connie W Tsao2, Andre La Gerche3,4, Orlando P Simonetti5, John P Greenwood6.
Abstract
Stress cardiac imaging is the current first line investigation for coronary artery disease diagnosis and decision making and an adjunctive tool in a range of non-ischaemic cardiovascular diseases. Exercise cardiovascular magnetic resonance (Ex-CMR) has developed over the past 25 years to combine the superior image qualities of CMR with the preferred method of exercise stress. Presently, numerous exercise methods exist, from performing stress on an adjacent CMR compatible treadmill to in-scanner exercise, most commonly on a supine cycle ergometer. Cardiac conditions studied by Ex-CMR are broad, commonly investigating ischaemic heart disease and congenital heart disease but extending to pulmonary hypertension and diabetic heart disease. This review presents an in-depth assessment of the various Ex-CMR stress methods and the varied pulse sequence approaches, including those specially designed for Ex-CMR. Current and future developments in image acquisition are highlighted, and will likely lead to a much greater clinical use of Ex-CMR across a range of cardiovascular conditions.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance; Exercise cardiovascular magnetic resonance; Exercise stress; Stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance; Supine cycle ergometer; Treadmill cardiovascular magnetic resonance
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32907587 PMCID: PMC7488086 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-020-00652-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Characteristics and benefits of the varying exercise modalities used in exercise CMR
| Exercise type | Treadmill | Upright cycle ergometer | Supine Cycle ergometer | Supine stepper ergometer | Prone exercise | Isometric Handgrip |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outside MR scanner | Inside MR scanner | |||||
| Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Dynamic | Static | |
| Common applications | Ischaemia testing (Regional wall motion & perfusion) | Aortic/Pulmonary Flow | Ventricular volumes Aortic/pulmonary flow | Ventricular volumes Aortic/pulmonary flow | Spectroscopy | Spectroscopy Coronary endothelial function |
| Max exercise intensitya | Maximal | Light | Maximal | Submaximal/ Vigorous | Light-Moderate | Very-light |
| Benefits | -Patients more readily achieve maximal intensity exercise -Diagnostic 12 lead ECG performed during exercise -Treadmill test provides separate prognostic data - Maximal oxygen uptake during exercise on CMR adjacent treadmill feasible -Most natural and tolerated form of exercise | Allows imaging during exercise | ||||
| Allows imaging at multpile exercise levels | ||||||
-Only modality with upright in-scanner exercise -Less claustrophobia in open magnet scanner | -Can be performed to maximal exercise intensity in MR bore. | -Less leg restriction than cycle ergometer | -Stable stress heart rate -Minimal movement -No magnet bore restriction | |||
| Weaknesses | - Post stress imaging allows heart rate recovery before imaging - Logistically difficult to image at multiple exercise intensities | Unable to perform 12 lead ECG or accurate ST segment monitoring during in-scanner exercise | ||||
-Uses open magnet scanner – low field strength (low SNR), limited availability, CMR feasible but non-standard. -Only published in minimal studies to light intensity exercise. | -Cycling can be restricted by magnet bore diameter | - Lower intensity exercise than cycle ergometer | - Uncomfortable form of exercise - Modest exercise feasible - Logistically difficult to increase resistance | -Atypical form of exercise - Limited increase in heart rate | ||
aHighest exercise intensity achieved in published research, with intensities defined by American College of sports medicines guidelines [32]. SNR = signal-to-noise ratio
Fig. 1Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) compatible scanner adjacent treadmill, developed and utilised in ischaemia studies by the Ohio State University Research group [27], reduces transfer times for post stress CMR imaging, whilst still allowing a diagnostic 12-lead ECG treadmill test and a simultaneous maximal oxygen uptake test, if required
The transfer times and resultant imaging heart rates in treadmill exercise CMR studies
| Study | Year | Patient population | Age | Treadmill location | Time (s) from exercise cessation to stress CMR: | Peak HR | Image acquisition HR | CMR completion HR | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initiation | Cine image completion | Perfusion completion | |||||||||
| Rerkpattanapipat [ | 2003 | Patients referred for angiography | 27 | 62 ± 11 | Outside MR scanner | NS | 61 ± 24 | N/A | 130 ± 20 bpm | 113 ± 16 bpm | NS |
| Jekic [ | 2008 | Healthy volunteers | 20 | 39 ± 15 | Corner of MR scanner room | 30 ± 4 | 45 ± 4 | 57 ± 5a | 98 ± 7% THR | 84 ± 11% THR | NS |
| Raman [ | 2010 | Patients referred for MPS-SPECT | 43 | 54 ± 12 | Corner of MR scanner room | 42 ± 5 | 68 ± 14 | 88 ± 8 | 93 ± 9% THR | 74 ± 10% THR (cine) | NS |
| Foster [ | 2012 | Healthy volunteers | 10 | 23–67 | MR Scanner adjacent | 24 ± 4 | 40 ± 7 | 50.5 ± 9 | 98 ± 8% THR | 86 ± 9% THR | 81 ± 9% THR |
| Thavendiranathan [ | 2014 | Healthy volunteers | 28 | 28 ± 11 | MR Scanner adjacent | 21 ± 2 | 41 ± 4 | N/A | 173 (146–196) bpm | 148 ± 14 bpm | NS |
| Sukpraphrute [ | 2015 | Patients with known or suspected CAD | 115 | 59 ± 13 | Outside MR scanner room | NS | <60sb | N/A | 88 ± 12% THR | NS | NS |
| Lafountain [ | 2016 | Athletes | 10 | 26 ± 5 | Scanner adjacent | 36 ± 4c | NS | N/A | > 95% THR | 87% THR | NS |
| Raman [ | 2016 | Patients referred for MPS-SPECT | 94 | 57 ± 11 | Scanner adjacent | 25 ± 13 | 46 ± 16 | 87 ± 36 | 97 ± 10% THR | 83 ± 11% THR (cine images) 76 ± 11% THR (perfusion) | NS |
aTime to peak perfusion
b100% of patients completed diagnostic imaging in <60s, exact times not specified
cCPET face mask removal increased transfer time
Abbreviations: BPM beats per minute, CAD Coronary artery disease, CPET cardiopulmonary exercise test, HR Heart rate, MR magnetic resonance, N/A Not applicable, NS not specified, N Number of patients, MPS-SPECT Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy Single-photon emission computed tomography, THR Target heart rate
Fig. 2Comparison of pharmacological stress CMR and exercise treadmill CMR protocols. A figure to compare the typical stress protocol for: Dobutamine stress CMR (a), adenosine stress perfusion CMR (b) and treadmill stress Ex-CMR (c). Estimated times of completed protocols may vary and may be dependent on centre experience. LGE = Late gadolinium enhancement; LV = Left ventricle
Fig. 3Lode BV supine cycle ergometer during in-scanner supine exercise cardiac magnetic resonance. The Lode BV supine cycle ergometer allows in-scanner exercise, up to maximal exercise intensity, during CMR scanning, as demonstrated by La Gerche et al. [29]. The ergometer attaches firmly to the CMR scanner bed by screw attachments and is safe to use in CMR scanners up to 3 T. The patients’ feet attach into the stirrups and strap securely in place. Resistance can be altered manually in 1-watt intervals. This ergometer is the most utilised modality in Ex-CMR research studies
Fig. 4Custom supine stepper ergometer. An example of a supine stepper ergometer utilised in research at the University of Wisconsin [87]. a. The ergometer outside the CMR-scanner. b- The ergometer in use. The ergometer allows for exercise via an up/down motion, a technique which is reported to cause less movement artefact than the cycle ergometer at the cost of less muscle mass recruitment and thus lower achievable maximal heart rates
Fig. 5Example of a supine bicycle Ex-CMR protocol. In-scanner Ex-CMR protocols may vary depending on indication, number of exercise stages required and participant fitness. Participants with superior cardiovascular fitness may benefit from shorter intervals between, or more aggressive, increases in resistance to achieve the target heart rate (THR) before leg fatigue. Using the Lode BV supine cycle ergometer, small alterations in resistance are possible, which can assist a tight control of THR
Fig. 6Example of real-time ungated CMR imaging at rest and during maximal exercise. Real-time ungated biventricular volume assessment methodology as developed by La Gerche et al. and subsequently utilised in numerous subsequent clinical studies
Features and findings of treadmill exercise Cardiac MRI studies in coronary artery disease
| Study | Patient population | n. | Mean | Treadmill location | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rerkpattanapipat (2003) [ | Patients referred for coronary angiography | 27 | 62 ± 11 | Outside scanner room | Detected coronary artery stenosis > 70% on coronary angiography with sensitivity and specificity of 79% & 85%. |
| Raman (2010) [ | Patients referred for SPECT | 43 | 54 ± 12 | MR scanner room corner | Exercise stress CMR is feasible with cine wall motion and perfusion assessment and has moderate agreement with SPECT (K = 0.58) |
| Sukpraphrute (2015) [ | Patients with known or suspected CAD | 115 | 59 ± 13 | Outside scanner room | Treadmill Ex-CMR RWMA assessment identified those at risk of future adverse events (myocardial infarction, death, unstable angina prompting admission) 47% with RWMA vs 17% without |
Raman (EXACT trial) (2016) [ | Patients referred for SPECT | 94 | 59 ± 13 | Scanner adjacent | Treadmill stress CMR demonstrated a stronger correlation with coronary angiography and superior specificity, sensitivity, positive and negative predictive values for > 70% stenosis at angiography than treadmill SPECT |
Abbreviations: CAD coronary artery disease, CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, RWMA regional wall motion abnormality, SPECT single photon emission computed tomography,
Supine ergometer exercise CMR studies in Congenital Heart Disease
| Study | n. | Population | Variable assessed | Exercise intensity* | Imaging | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pedersen (2002) [ | 11 | Children with prior TCPC operation | SVC, IVC tunnel, LPA & RPA flow | Low-Moderate | TFEPI Retrospective gating Breath hold Exercise cessation | IVC flow doubled with exercise with equal distribution to both lungs, suggesting pulmonary resistance rather than geometry decides exercise flow distribution in the TCPC circulation |
| Roest (2002) [ | 31 | Repaired ToF (15) & healthy volunteers (16) | Biventricular volume and pulmonary flow | Moderate | Repaired ToF patients demonstrated a decrease in PR with exercise but abnormal RV response to exercise compared to healthy controls. | |
| Roest (2004) [ | 41 | Atrial corrected-TGA (27), Healthy control (14) | Biventricular volumes | Moderate | Patients with atrial correction of TGA demonstrate abnormal biventricular response to exercise despite normal resting function. | |
| Oosterhof (2005) [ | 64 | Atrial corrected TGA (39) & Healthy volunteers (25) | Aortic flow and systemic ventricle function (exercise vs dobutamine stress) | Vigorous | A trial corrected TGA patients demonstrate an abnormal response to exercise with a decrease in systemic ventricle EF, but a normal response with dobutamine stress. Therefore these two methods cannot be used interchangeably in this group. | |
| Lurz (2012) [ | 17 | PPVI for PR/PS as a result of congenital heart disease | Biventricular volumes | Until exhaustion pre-PPVI** | Realtime radial K-T sense volumes | Post PPVI, PS patients had restoration of RVEF exercise reserves, PR patients only had a mild augmentation of exercise SV. |
| Van De Bruaene (2014) [ | 10 | Fontan circulation (10) | Systemic ventricle volumes, invasive radial and PA pressures | Submaximal | Un-gated real time, free-breathing. | Sildenafil improves cardiac index during exercise in Fontan patients suggesting pulmonary vasculature resistance is a physiological limitation in this patient group. |
| Van De Bruaene (2015) [ | 10 | Fontan circulation (10) | Systemic ventricle volumes, invasive radial and PA pressures | Submaximal | Demonstrated that systemic ventricular filling increases with inspiration, ‘respiratory pump’, which persisted throughout exercise. | |
| Khiabani (2015) [ | 30 | Fontan circulation | Ascending and descending aortic flow and SVC flow | Moderate/ to VAT | Retrospective gating, breath hold after exercise cessation | Computational fluid dynamics simulations performed on the measured flows demonstrated that power loss in the TCPC circulation increased exponentially as patients exercised towards ventillatory anaerobic threshold (VAT) |
| Barber (2016) [ | 30 | Pediatric: Repaired ToF (10) i-PAH (10) Control (10) | MR-CPEX Biventricular volumes & aortic cardiac output | Submaximal | Realtime radial K-T sense volumes Realtime UNFOLDed-SENSE flow | MR-augmented CPEX is feasible and safe in children with cardiac disease. Peak VO2 was reduced in children with PAH or repaired ToF compared with healthy controls. |
| Wei (2016) [ | 11 | Fontan circulation/TCPC | IVC, SVC and aortic flows | Moderate/ to VAT | Realtime shared velocity encoded EPI | Utilised a novel chest wall tracking technique to demonstrate respiration caused minimal net changes in mean flow, thus validating the routine use of breath held imaging in these patients and that IVC and descending aortic flows were interchangeable. |
| Asschenfeldt (2017) [ | 40 | Surgically repaired VSD (20) and control (20) | Aortic and pulmonary flow | Submaximal | Real time EPI with half-scan FB during exercise | Patients demonstrated impaired cardiac index vs controls related to increased retrograde flow in pulmonary artery with progressive exercise. |
| Tang (2017) [ | 47 | Fontan circulation/TCPC | SVC, ascending and descending aortic flows | Moderate/ to VAT | Free breathing Exercise cessation | Fontan patients with a smaller TCPC diameter index (which accounts for narrowing’s in the TCPC circulation) demonstrate increased indexed power loss and worse exercise performance. |
| Habert (2018) [ | 22 | Repaired ToF (11) Control (11) | Biventricular volumes & aortic distensibility | Low-moderate | Breath hold exercise cease | Repaired ToF demonstrated reduced bi-ventricular contractile reserve and reduced ascending aortic distensibility vs controls. |
| Helsen (2018) [ | 45 | Atrial corrected-TGA (23) CC-TGA (10) Control (12) | Systemic ventricle volumes | Maximal | Un-gated real time, free-breathing. | A trial corrected-TGA patients demonstrate deteriorating systemic ventricle volumes and stroke volume during exercise compared with CC-TGA patients; caution should be used in analysing pooled systemic right ventricle populations. |
Jaijee (2018) [ | 48 | PAH (14) Control (34) | Biventricular volumes. Aortic and pulmonary flow | Submaximal | PAH patients demonstrated a decrease in RV contractile reserve with exercise and healthy controls had a reduced contractile reserve exercising during hypoxia (breathing 12% oxygen) | |
| Claessen (2019) [ | 30 | Fontan (10), Control (20) | Systemic ventricle volumes, invasive radial and PA pressures | Maximal | Fontan patients have a diminished heart rate reserve as a result of abnormal cardiac filling rather than sinus atrial node dysfunction causing chronotropic incompetence. |
*Exercise intensities according to American college of sports medicine guidelines
**Patients exercised until exhaustion pre-PPVI, then post-PPVI patients exercised to the same exercise intensity as pre-PPVI
Abbreviations: CC congenitally corrected, BH breath hold, FB free breathing, i-PAH idiopathic pulmonary hypertension, IVC inferior vena cava, LPA left pulmonary artery, RPA right pulmonary artery, SVC superior vena cava, TGA transposition of the great arteries, ToF tetralogy of Fallot, VAT ventillatory anaerobic threshold, VSD ventricular septal defect