Superiority of a Representative MRI Flow Waveform over Doppler Ultrasound for Aortic Wave Reflection Assessment in Children and Adolescents With/Without a History of Heart Disease.
Jonathan P MynardRemi KowalskiHilary A HarringtonAvinash KondiboyinaJoseph J SmolichMichael M H CheungPublished in: Annals of biomedical engineering (2023)
Wave separation analysis (WSA) reveals the impact of forward- and backward-running waves on the arterial pressure pulse, but the calculations require a flow waveform. This study investigated (1) the variability of the ascending aortic flow waveform in children and adolescents with/without a childhood heart disease history (CHD); (2) the accuracy of WSA obtained with a representative flow waveform (RepFlow), compared with the triangulation method and published ultrasound-derived adult representative flow; (3) the impact of limitations in Doppler ultrasound on WSA; and (4) generalizability of results to adults with a history of CHD. Phase contrast MRI was performed in youth without (n = 45, Group 1, 10-19 years) and with CHD (n = 79, Group 2, 7-18 years), and adults with CHD history (n = 29, Group 3, 19-59 years). Segmented aortic cross-sectional area was used as a surrogate for the central pressure waveform in WSA. A subject-specific virtual Doppler ultrasound was performed on MRI data by extracting velocities from a sample volume. Time/amplitude-normalized ascending aortic flow waveforms were highly consistent amongst all groups. WSA with RepFlow therefore yielded errors < 10% in all groups for reflected wave magnitude and return time. Absolute errors were typically 1.5-3 times greater with other methods, including subject-specific (best-case/virtual) Doppler ultrasound, for which velocity profile skewing introduced waveform errors. Our data suggest that RepFlow is the optimal approach for pressure-only WSA in children and adolescents with/without CHD, as well as adults with CHD history, and may even be more accurate than subject-specific Doppler ultrasound in the ascending aorta.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance imaging
- pulmonary artery
- aortic dissection
- cross sectional
- aortic valve
- blood flow
- contrast enhanced
- pulmonary hypertension
- contrast enhanced ultrasound
- left ventricular
- ultrasound guided
- patient safety
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- diffusion weighted imaging
- heart failure
- blood pressure
- electronic health record
- adverse drug
- high resolution
- randomized controlled trial
- machine learning
- young adults
- density functional theory
- high intensity
- functional connectivity
- data analysis
- liquid chromatography
- high speed
- childhood cancer
- single molecule
- finite element
- virtual reality