Does a navigator-guided technique for high temporal resolution tissue phase mapping improve the detection of left ventricular motion patterns compared to standard breath-hold measurements in healthy volunteers?
A novel navigator-gated phase contrast MRI technique achieves high temporal resolution (13.8 ms) during free breathing, revealing detailed left ventricular motion patterns previously only visible on echocardiography.
Data acquisition for phase contrast velocity mapping of myocardial motion is typically based on multiple breath-held 2D measurements with limited acquisition duration and consequently relatively poor temporal resolution. In order to overcome the limitations of breath-hold acquisitions, an improved navigator-guided technique was implemented based on 2 navigator signals within each cardiac cycle in combination with paired acceptance and rejection criteria of successive navigator signals. Respiratory gated phase contrast measurements with 3-directional velocity encoding were performed in 12 healthy volunteers in basal, midventricular, and apical locations of the left ventricle during free breathing with a temporal resolution of 13.8 ms. Results were compared to standard breath-hold measurements with a temporal resolution of 69 ms. Data from the high temporal resolution study revealed details in left ventricular motion patterns that were previously not seen in phase contrast measurements and are only known from echocardiography. The proposed navigator gated technique for high temporal resolution velocity mapping is, therefore, highly promising for the detection of local and global motion abnormalities in patients with disturbed left ventricular performance, such as diastolic dysfunction.
Jung et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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