Four-dimensional flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance aortic cross-sectional pressure changes and their associations with flow patterns in health and ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm

被引:0
|
作者
Bouaoua, Kevin [1 ]
Dietenbecka, Thomas [1 ]
Soulatb, Gilles [2 ]
Bargiotasc, Ioannis [3 ]
Houriez-Gombaud-Saintongea, Sophia [1 ,4 ]
De Cesarea, Alain [1 ]
Gencerb, Umit [2 ]
Girona, Alain [1 ]
Jimeneza, Elena [1 ]
Messasb, Emmanuel [2 ]
Lucore, Didier [5 ]
Bollachea, Emilie [1 ]
Mousseauxb, Elie [2 ]
Kachenouraa, Nadjia [1 ]
机构
[1] Sorbonne Univ, INSERM, CNRS, Lab Imagerie Biomed, Paris, France
[2] Hop Europeen Georges Pompidou, INSERM 970, Paris, France
[3] Univ Paris Saclay, CMLA, ENS Cachan, CNRS, F-94235 Cachan, France
[4] ESME Sudria Res Lab, Paris, France
[5] Univ Paris Saclay, CNRS, Lab Interdisciplinaire Sci Numer, Orsay, France
关键词
4D flow MRI; Ascending thoracic aortic aneurysms; Aortic pressure; Vorticity; Wall shear stress; Remodeling; WALL SHEAR-STRESS; BLOOD-FLOW; MRI; QUANTIFICATION; SURFACE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jocmr.2024.101030
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background Ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm (ATAA) is a silent and threatening dilation of the ascending aorta (AscAo). Maximal aortic diameter which is currently used for ATAA patients management and surgery planning has been shown to inadequately characterize risk of dissection in a large proportion of patients. Our aim was to propose a comprehensive quantitative evaluation of aortic morphology and pressure-flow-wall associations from four-dimensional (4D) flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) data in healthy aging and in patients with ATAA. Methods We studied 17 ATAA patients (64.7 +/- 14.3 years, 5 females) along with 17 age- and sex-matched healthy controls (59.7 +/- 13.3 years, 5 females) and 13 younger healthy subjects (33.5 +/- 11.1 years, 4 females). All subjects underwent a CMR exam, including 4D flow and three-dimensional anatomical images of the aorta. This latter dataset was used for aortic morphology measurements, including AscAo maximal diameter (iD(MAX)) and volume, indexed to body surface area. 4D flow MRI data were used to estimate 1) cross-sectional local AscAo spatial (triangle P-S) and temporal (triangle P-T) pressure changes as well as the distance (triangle D-PS) and time duration (triangle T-PT) between local pressure peaks, 2) AscAo maximal wall shear stress (WSSMAX) at peak systole, and 3) AscAo flow vorticity amplitude (V-MAX), duration (V-FWHM), and eccentricity (V-ECC). Results Consistency of flow and pressure indices was demonstrated through their significant associations with AscAo iD(MAX) (WSSMAX:r = -0.49, p < 0.001; V-ECC:r = -0.29, p = 0.045; V-FWHM:r = 0.48, p < 0.001; triangle D-PS:r = 0.37, p = 0.010; triangle T-PT:r = -0.52, p < 0.001) and indexed volume (WSSMAX:r = -0.63, V-ECC:r = -0.51, V-FWHM:r = 0.53, triangle D-PS:r = 0.54, triangle T-PT:r = -0.63, p < 0.001 for all). Intra-AscAo cross-sectional pressure difference, triangle P-S, was significantly and positively associated with both V-MAX (r = 0.55, p = 0.002) and WSSMAX (r = 0.59, p < 0.001) in the 30 healthy subjects (48.3 +/- 18.0 years). Associations remained significant after adjustment for iD(MAX), age, and systolic blood pressure. Superimposition of ATAA patients to normal aging trends between triangle P-S and WSSMAX as well as V-MAX allowed identifying patients with substantially high pressure differences concomitant with AscAo dilation. Conclusion Local variations in pressures within ascending aortic cross-sections derived from 4D flow MRI were associated with flow changes, as quantified by vorticity, and with stress exerted by blood on the aortic wall, as quantified by wall shear stress. Such flow-wall and pressure interactions might help for the identification of at-risk patients.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Altered ascending aortic wall shear stress in patients with corrected atrioventricular septal defect: a comprehensive cardiovascular magnetic resonance and 4D flow MRI evaluation
    Elders, Bernadette
    Westenberg, Jos
    van den Boogaard, Pieter
    Calkoen, Emmeline
    Blom, Nico
    Kroft, Lucia
    de Roos, Albert
    Roest, Arno
    CARDIOLOGY IN THE YOUNG, 2019, 29 (05) : 637 - 642
  • [42] Flow patterns in ascending aortic aneurysms: Determining the role of hypertension using phase contrast magnetic resonance and computational fluid dynamics
    Ramaekers M.J.F.G.
    van der Vlugt I.B.
    Westenberg J.J.M.
    Perinajová R.
    Lamb H.J.
    Wildberger J.E.
    Kenjereš S.
    Schalla S.
    Computers in Biology and Medicine, 2024, 172
  • [43] Improving visualization of 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance with four-dimensional angiographic data: generation of a 4D phase-contrast magnetic resonance CardioAngiography (4D PC-MRCA)
    Bustamante, Mariana
    Gupta, Vikas
    Carlhall, Carl-Johan
    Ebbers, Tino
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 2017, 19
  • [44] Analysis of pulse wave velocity in the thoracic aorta by flow-sensitive four-dimensional MRI: Reproducibility and correlation with characteristics in patients with aortic atherosclerosis
    Markl, Michael
    Wallis, Wolf
    Strecker, Christoph
    Gladstone, Beryl Primrose
    Vach, Werner
    Harloff, Andreas
    JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING, 2012, 35 (05) : 1162 - 1168
  • [45] False lumen pressure estimation in type B aortic dissection using 4D flow cardiovascular magnetic resonance: comparisons with aortic growth
    Marlevi, David
    Sotelo, Julio A.
    Grogan-Kaylor, Ross
    Ahmed, Yunus
    Uribe, Sergio
    Patel, Himanshu J.
    Edelman, Elazer R.
    Nordsletten, David A.
    Burris, Nicholas S.
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE, 2021, 23 (01)
  • [46] Hemodynamic Assessment of Celiaco-mesenteric Anastomosis in Patients with Pancreaticoduodenal Artery Aneurysm Concomitant with Celiac Artery Occlusion using Flow-sensitive Four-dimensional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    Mano, Y.
    Takehara, Y.
    Sakaguchi, T.
    Alley, M. T.
    Isoda, H.
    Shimizu, T.
    Wakayama, T.
    Sugiyama, M.
    Sakahara, H.
    Konno, H.
    Unno, N.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF VASCULAR AND ENDOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2013, 46 (03) : 321 - 328
  • [47] Liver cirrhosis: relationship between fibrosis-associated hepatic morphological changes and portal hemodynamics using four-dimensional flow magnetic resonance imaging
    Higaki, Atsushi
    Kanki, Akihiko
    Yamamoto, Akira
    Ueda, Yu
    Moriya, Kazunori
    Sanai, Hiroyasu
    Sotozono, Hidemitsu
    Tamada, Tsutomu
    JAPANESE JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY, 2023, 41 (06) : 625 - 636
  • [48] Time-resolved 3-dimensional magnetic resonance phase contrast imaging (4D Flow MRI) reveals altered blood flow patterns in the ascending aorta of patients with valve-sparing aortic root replacement
    Oechtering, Thekla H.
    Sieren, Malte M.
    Hunold, Peter
    Hennemuth, Anja
    Huellebrand, Markus
    Scharfschwerdt, Michael
    Richardt, Doreen
    Sievers, Hans-Hinrich
    Barkhausen, Joerg
    Frydrychowicz, Alex
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2020, 159 (03) : 798 - +
  • [49] Intraindividual validation of 4D flow measurement against 2D flow measurements in complex flow patterns in routine clinical cardiovascular magnetic resonance of bicuspid aortic valve
    Kharabish, Ahmed
    Belker, Kristina
    Martinoff, Stefan
    Ewert, Peter
    Hennemuth, Anja
    Huellebrand, Markus
    Stern, Heiko
    Meierhofer, Christian
    EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY AND NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2020, 51 (01)
  • [50] Interdependencies of aortic arch secondary flow patterns, geometry, and age analysed by 4-dimensional phase contrast magnetic resonance imaging at 3 Tesla
    Frydrychowicz, Alex
    Berger, Alexander
    del Rio, Alejandro Munoz
    Russe, Maximilian F.
    Bock, Jelena
    Harloff, Andreas
    Markl, Michael
    EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY, 2012, 22 (05) : 1122 - 1130