Inter-study reproducibility of left ventricular torsion and torsion rate quantification using MR myocardial feature tracking

2016 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Inter-study reproducibility of left ventricular torsion and torsion rate quantification using MR myocardial feature tracking​
Kowallick, J. T. ; Morton, G.; Lamata, P.; Jogiya, R.; Kutty, S.; Lotz, J.   & Hasenfuß, G.  et al.​ (2016) 
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging43(1) pp. 128​-137​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.24979 

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Authors
Kowallick, Johannes Tammo ; Morton, Geraint; Lamata, Pablo; Jogiya, Roy; Kutty, Shelby; Lotz, Joachim ; Hasenfuß, Gerd ; Nagel, Eike; Chiribiri, Amedeo; Schuster, Andreas 
Abstract
BackgroundTo determine the inter-study reproducibility of MR feature tracking (MR-FT) derived left ventricular (LV) torsion and torsion rates for a combined assessment of systolic and diastolic myocardial function. MethodsSteady-state free precession (SSFP) cine LV short-axis stacks were acquired at 9:00 (Exam A), 9:30 (Exam B), and 14:00 (Exam C) in 16 healthy volunteers at 3 Tesla. SSFP images were analyzed offline using MR-FT to assess rotational displacement in apical and basal slices. Global peak torsion, peak systolic and peak diastolic torsion rates were calculated using different definitions (twist, normalized twist and circumferential-longitudinal (CL) shear angle). Exam A and B were compared to assess the inter-study reproducibility. Morning and afternoon scans were compared to address possible diurnal variation. ResultsThe different methods showed good inter-study reproducibility for global peak torsion (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC]: 0.90-0.92; coefficient of variation [CoV]: 19.0-20.3%) and global peak systolic torsion rate (ICC: 0.82-0.84; CoV: 25.9-29.0%). Conversely, global peak diastolic torsion rate showed little inter-study reproducibility (ICC: 0.34-0.47; CoV: 40.8-45.5%). Global peak torsion as determined by the CL shear angle showed the best inter-study reproducibility (ICC: 0.90;CoV: 19.0%). MR-FT results were not measurably affected by diurnal variation between morning and afternoon scans (CL shear angle: 4.8 1.4 degrees, 4.8 +/- 1.5 degrees, and 4.1 +/- 1.6 degrees for Exam A, B, and C, respectively; P = 0.21). ConclusionMR-FT based derivation of myocardial peak torsion and peak systolic torsion rate has high inter-study reproducibility as opposed to peak diastolic torsion rate. The CL shear angle was the most reproducible parameter independently of cardiac anatomy and may develop into a robust tool to quantify cardiac rotational mechanics in longitudinal MR-FT patient studies.
Issue Date
2016
Publisher
Wiley-blackwell
Journal
Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging 
ISSN
1053-1807
eISSN
1522-2586

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