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Sector‐wise golden‐angle phase contrast with high temporal resolution for evaluation of left ventricular diastolic dysfunction
Author(s) -
Fyrdahl Alexander,
Ramos Joao G.,
Eriksson Maria J.,
Caidahl Kenneth,
Ugander Martin,
Sigfridsson Andreas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.28018
Subject(s) - flip angle , diastole , temporal resolution , contrast (vision) , cardiology , cardiac cycle , phase contrast microscopy , medicine , doppler effect , pulse (music) , limits of agreement , nuclear medicine , nuclear magnetic resonance , magnetic resonance imaging , radiology , physics , optics , blood pressure , detector , astronomy
Purpose To develop a high temporal resolution phase‐contrast pulse sequence for evaluation of diastolic filling patterns, and to evaluate it in comparison to transthoracic echocardiography. Methods A phase‐contrast velocity‐encoded gradient‐echo pulse sequence was implemented with a sector‐wise golden‐angle radial ordering. Acquisitions were optimized for myocardial tissue (TE/TR: 4.4/6.8 ms, flip angle: 8º, velocity encoding: 30 cm/s) and transmitral flow (TE/TR: 4.0/6.6 ms, flip angle: 20º, velocity encoding: 150 cm/s). Shared velocity encoding was combined with a sliding‐window reconstruction that enabled up to 250 frames per cardiac cycle. Transmitral and myocardial velocities were measured in 35 patients. Echocardiographic velocities were obtained with pulsed‐wave Doppler using standard methods. Results Myocardial velocity showed a low difference and good correlation between MRI and Doppler (mean ± 95% limits of agreement 0.9 ± 3.7 cm/s, R 2 = 0.63). Transmitral velocity was underestimated by MRI ( P < .05) with a difference of −11 ± 28 cm/s (R 2 = 0.45). The early‐to‐late ratio correlated well (R 2 = 0.66) with a minimal difference (0.03 ± 0.6). Analysis of interobserver and intra‐observer variability showed excellent agreement for all measurements. Conclusions The proposed method enables the acquisition of phase‐contrast images during a single breath‐hold with a sufficiently high temporal resolution to match transthoracic echocardiography, which opens the possibility for many clinically relevant variables to be assessed by MRI.