Can MR imaging tagging be used to noninvasively assess complex myocardial motion in humans?
Phantoms and human volunteers
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging tagging (locally perturbing magnetization with selective RF saturation of multiple, thin tag planes)
Depiction of myocardial motion (translation, rotation, and twist)surrogate
MR imaging tagging is a feasible noninvasive method for assessing complex myocardial motion, such as cardiac twist, throughout the contractile phase.
Specified regions of the myocardium can be labeled in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging to serve as markers during contraction. The technique is based on locally perturbing the magnetization of the myocardium with selective radio-frequency (RF) saturation of multiple, thin tag planes during diastole followed by conventional, orthogonal-plane imaging during systole. The technique was implemented on a 0.38-T imager and tested on phantoms and volunteers. In humans, tags could be seen 60-450 msec after RF saturation, thus permitting sampling of the entire contractile phase of the cardiac cycle. Tagged regions appear as hypointense stripes, and their patterns of displacement reflect intervening cardiac motion. In addition to simple translation and rotation, complex motions such as cardiac twist can be demonstrated. The effects of RF pulse angle, relaxation times, and heart rate on depiction of the tagged region are discussed.
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Elias A. Zerhouni
Cardiac Imaging
Dave Parish
Johns Hopkins University
Walter J. Rogers
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Radiology
Johns Hopkins University
Howard County General Hospital
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Zerhouni et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c4315db78463c71097f58e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1148/radiology.169.1.3420283