Cardiovascular magnetic resonance underestimated mean pressure gradient compared to Doppler echocardiography (bias -6.5 mmHg), with flow vorticity independently driving this discrepancy (p<0.001).
Observational (n=68)
What factors are responsible for discrepancies between cardiovascular magnetic resonance and Doppler echocardiography in measuring transvalvular mean pressure gradient in patients with aortic stenosis?
Flow vorticity, energy loss, and Strouhal number significantly contribute to the underestimation of transvalvular mean pressure gradient by CMR compared to TTE in aortic stenosis, which can be partially corrected using a multivariate regression model.
BACKGROUND: Valve effective orifice area EOA and transvalvular mean pressure gradient (MPG) are the most frequently used parameters to assess aortic stenosis (AS) severity. However, MPG measured by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) may differ from the one measured by transthoracic Doppler-echocardiography (TTE). The objectives of this study were: 1) to identify the factors responsible for the MPG measurement discrepancies by CMR versus TTE in AS patients; 2) to investigate the effect of flow vorticity on AS severity assessment by CMR; and 3) to evaluate two models reconciling MPG discrepancies between CMR/TTE measurements. METHODS: Eight healthy subjects and 60 patients with AS underwent TTE and CMR. Strouhal number (St), energy loss (EL), and vorticity were computed from CMR. Two correction models were evaluated: 1) based on the Gorlin equation (MPG(CMR-Gorlin)); 2) based on a multivariate regression model (MPG(CMR-Predicted)). RESULTS: MPGCMR underestimated MPGTTE (bias = -6.5 mmHg, limits of agreement from -18.3 to 5.2 mmHg). On multivariate regression analysis, St (p = 0.002), EL (p = 0.001), and mean systolic vorticity (p < 0.001) were independently associated with larger MPG discrepancies between CMR and TTE. MPG(CMR-Gorlin) and MPGTTE correlation and agreement were r = 0.7; bias = -2.8 mmHg, limits of agreement from -18.4 to 12.9 mmHg. MPG(CMR-Predicted) model showed better correlation and agreement with MPGTTE (r = 0.82; bias = 0.5 mmHg, limits of agreement from -9.1 to 10.2 mmHg) than measured MPGCMR and MPG(CMR-Gorlin). CONCLUSION: Flow vorticity is one of the main factors responsible for MPG discrepancies between CMR and TTE.
García et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Aortic stenosis (n=68). Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) vs. Transthoracic Doppler-echocardiography (TTE) was evaluated on Discrepancy in transvalvular mean pressure gradient (MPG) between CMR and TTE. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance underestimated mean pressure gradient compared to Doppler echocardiography (bias -6.5 mmHg), with flow vorticity independently driving this discrepancy (p<0.001).
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