Pulmonary blood volume measured by cardiovascular magnetic resonance: influence of pulmonary transit time methods and left atrial volume

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE(2021)

引用 5|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Background Increased pulmonary blood volume (PBV) is a measure of congestion and is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events. PBV can be quantified using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging as the product of cardiac output and pulmonary transit time (PTT), the latter measured from the contrast time-intensity curves in the right and left side of the heart from first-pass perfusion (FPP). Several methods of estimating PTT exist, including pulmonary transit beats (PTB), peak-to-peak, and center of gravity (CoG). The aim of this study was to determine the accuracy and precision for these methods of quantifying the PBV, taking the left atrium volume (LAV) into consideration. Methods Fifty-eight participants (64 ± 11 years, 24 women) underwent 1.5 T CMR. PTT was quantified from (1) a basal left ventricular short-axis image (FPP), and (2) the reference method with a separate contrast administration using an image intersecting the pulmonary artery (PA) and the LA (CoG(PA-LA)). Results Compared to the reference, PBV for (a) PTB(FPP) was 14 ± 17% larger, (b) peak-peak(FPP) was 17 ± 16% larger, and (c) CoG(FPP) was 18 ± 10% larger. Subtraction of the LAV (available for n = 50) decreased overall differences to − 1 ± 19%, 2 ± 18%, and 3 ± 12% for PTB(FPP), peak-peak(FPP), and CoG(FPP), respectively. Lowest interobserver variability was seen for CoG(FPP) (− 2 ± 7%). Conclusions CoG(PA-LA) and FPP methods measured the same PBV only when adjusting for the LAV, since FPP inherently quantifies a volume consisting of PBV + LAV. CoG(FPP) had the best precision and lowest interobserver variability among the FPP methods of measuring PBV. Graphical abstract
更多
查看译文
关键词
Congestion, Heart failure, First-pass perfusion, Pulmonary blood volume, Pulmonary transit time
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要