Home About us Contact | |||
Regurgitant Fractions (regurgitant + fraction)
Selected AbstractsAortic and mitral regurgitation: Quantification using moving slice velocity mappingJOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 2 2001Sebastian Kozerke PhD Abstract Comprehensive assessment of the severity of valvular insufficiency includes quantification of regurgitant volumes. Previous methods lack reliable slice positioning with respect to the valve and are prone to velocity offsets due to through-plane motion of the valvular plane of the heart. Recently, the moving slice velocity mapping technique was proposed. In this study, the technique was applied for quantification of mitral and aortic regurgitation. Time-efficient navigator-based respiratory artifact suppression was achieved by implementing a prospective k-space reordering scheme in conjunction with slice position correction. Twelve patients with aortic insufficiency and three patients with mitral insufficiency were studied. Aortic regurgitant volumes were calculated from diastolic velocities mapped with a moving slice 5 mm distal to the aortic valve annulus. Mitral regurgitant flow was indirectly assessed by measuring mitral inflow at the level of the mitral annulus and net aortic outflow. Regurgitant fractions, derived from velocity data corrected for through-plane motion, were compared to data without correction for through-plane motion. In patients with mild and moderate aortic regurgitation, regurgitant fractions differed by 60% and 15%, on average, when comparing corrected and uncorrected data, respectively. Differences in severe aortic regurgitation were less (7%). Due to the large orifice area of the mitral valve, differences were still substantial in moderate-to-severe mitral regurgitation (19%). The moving slice velocity mapping technique was successfully applied in patients with aortic and mitral regurgitation. The importance of correction for valvular through-plane motion is demonstrated. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;14:106,112. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Experimental Setup to Evaluate the Performance of Percutaneous Pulmonary Valved Stent in Different Outflow Tract MorphologiesARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 1 2009Riccardo Vismara Abstract Percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation is a potential treatment for right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) dysfunction. However, RVOT implantation site varies among subjects and the success of the procedure depends on RVOT morphology selection. The aim of this study was to use in vitro testing to establish percutaneous valve competency in different previously defined RVOT morphologies. Five simplified RVOT geometries (stenotic, enlarged, straight, convergent, and divergent) were manufactured by silicone dipping. A mock bench was developed to test the percutaneous valve in the five different RVOTs. The bench consists of a volumetric pulsatile pump and of a hydraulic afterload. The pump is made of a piston driven by a low inertia programmable motor. The hydraulic afterload mimics the pulmonary input impedance and its design is based on a three element model of the pulmonary circulation. The mock bench can replicate different physiological and pathological hemodynamic conditions of the pulmonary circulation. The mock bench is here used to test the five RVOTs under physiological-like conditions: stroke volume range 40,70 mL, frequency range 60,80 bpm. The valved stent was implanted into the five different RVOT geometries. Pressures upstream and downstream of the valved stent were monitored. Flow rates were measured with and without the valved stent in the five mock RVOTs, and regurgitant fraction compared between the different valved stent RVOTs. The percutaneous valved stent drastically reduced regurgitant flow if compared with the RVOT without the valve. RVOT geometry did not significantly influence the flow rate curves. Mean regurgitant fractions varied from 5% in the stenotic RVOT to 7.3% in the straight RVOT, highlighting the influence of the RVOT geometry on valve competency. The mock bench presented in this study showed the ability to investigate the influence of RVOT geometry on the competence of valved stent used for percutaneous pulmonary valve treatment. [source] Aortic and mitral regurgitation: Quantification using moving slice velocity mappingJOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, Issue 2 2001Sebastian Kozerke PhD Abstract Comprehensive assessment of the severity of valvular insufficiency includes quantification of regurgitant volumes. Previous methods lack reliable slice positioning with respect to the valve and are prone to velocity offsets due to through-plane motion of the valvular plane of the heart. Recently, the moving slice velocity mapping technique was proposed. In this study, the technique was applied for quantification of mitral and aortic regurgitation. Time-efficient navigator-based respiratory artifact suppression was achieved by implementing a prospective k-space reordering scheme in conjunction with slice position correction. Twelve patients with aortic insufficiency and three patients with mitral insufficiency were studied. Aortic regurgitant volumes were calculated from diastolic velocities mapped with a moving slice 5 mm distal to the aortic valve annulus. Mitral regurgitant flow was indirectly assessed by measuring mitral inflow at the level of the mitral annulus and net aortic outflow. Regurgitant fractions, derived from velocity data corrected for through-plane motion, were compared to data without correction for through-plane motion. In patients with mild and moderate aortic regurgitation, regurgitant fractions differed by 60% and 15%, on average, when comparing corrected and uncorrected data, respectively. Differences in severe aortic regurgitation were less (7%). Due to the large orifice area of the mitral valve, differences were still substantial in moderate-to-severe mitral regurgitation (19%). The moving slice velocity mapping technique was successfully applied in patients with aortic and mitral regurgitation. The importance of correction for valvular through-plane motion is demonstrated. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;14:106,112. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Experimental Setup to Evaluate the Performance of Percutaneous Pulmonary Valved Stent in Different Outflow Tract MorphologiesARTIFICIAL ORGANS, Issue 1 2009Riccardo Vismara Abstract Percutaneous pulmonary valve implantation is a potential treatment for right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) dysfunction. However, RVOT implantation site varies among subjects and the success of the procedure depends on RVOT morphology selection. The aim of this study was to use in vitro testing to establish percutaneous valve competency in different previously defined RVOT morphologies. Five simplified RVOT geometries (stenotic, enlarged, straight, convergent, and divergent) were manufactured by silicone dipping. A mock bench was developed to test the percutaneous valve in the five different RVOTs. The bench consists of a volumetric pulsatile pump and of a hydraulic afterload. The pump is made of a piston driven by a low inertia programmable motor. The hydraulic afterload mimics the pulmonary input impedance and its design is based on a three element model of the pulmonary circulation. The mock bench can replicate different physiological and pathological hemodynamic conditions of the pulmonary circulation. The mock bench is here used to test the five RVOTs under physiological-like conditions: stroke volume range 40,70 mL, frequency range 60,80 bpm. The valved stent was implanted into the five different RVOT geometries. Pressures upstream and downstream of the valved stent were monitored. Flow rates were measured with and without the valved stent in the five mock RVOTs, and regurgitant fraction compared between the different valved stent RVOTs. The percutaneous valved stent drastically reduced regurgitant flow if compared with the RVOT without the valve. RVOT geometry did not significantly influence the flow rate curves. Mean regurgitant fractions varied from 5% in the stenotic RVOT to 7.3% in the straight RVOT, highlighting the influence of the RVOT geometry on valve competency. The mock bench presented in this study showed the ability to investigate the influence of RVOT geometry on the competence of valved stent used for percutaneous pulmonary valve treatment. [source] |