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Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging

Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals valuable insights into tissue histo-anatomy and microstructure, and has steadily gained traction in the cardiac community. Its wider use in small animal cardiac imaging in vivo has been constrained by its extreme sensitivity to motion, exagge...

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Autores principales: Lohezic, Maelene, Teh, Irvin, Bollensdorff, Christian, Peyronnet, Rémi, Hales, Patrick W., Grau, Vicente, Kohl, Peter, Schneider, Jürgen E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Pergamon Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4210665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25117498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2014.08.002
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author Lohezic, Maelene
Teh, Irvin
Bollensdorff, Christian
Peyronnet, Rémi
Hales, Patrick W.
Grau, Vicente
Kohl, Peter
Schneider, Jürgen E.
author_facet Lohezic, Maelene
Teh, Irvin
Bollensdorff, Christian
Peyronnet, Rémi
Hales, Patrick W.
Grau, Vicente
Kohl, Peter
Schneider, Jürgen E.
author_sort Lohezic, Maelene
collection PubMed
description Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals valuable insights into tissue histo-anatomy and microstructure, and has steadily gained traction in the cardiac community. Its wider use in small animal cardiac imaging in vivo has been constrained by its extreme sensitivity to motion, exaggerated by the high heart rates usually seen in rodents. Imaging of the isolated heart eliminates respiratory motion and, if conducted on arrested hearts, cardiac pulsation. This serves as an important intermediate step for basic and translational studies. However, investigating the micro-structural basis of cardiac deformation in the same heart requires observations in different deformation states. Here, we illustrate the imaging of isolated rat hearts in three mechanical states mimicking diastole (cardioplegic arrest), left-ventricular (LV) volume overload (cardioplegic arrest plus LV balloon inflation), and peak systole (lithium-induced contracture). An optimised MRI-compatible Langendorff perfusion setup with the radio-frequency (RF) coil integrated into the wet chamber was developed for use in a 9.4T horizontal bore scanner. Signal-to-noise ratio improved significantly, by 75% compared to a previous design with external RF coil, and stability tests showed no significant changes in mean T(1), T(2) or LV wall thickness over a 170 min period. In contracture, we observed a significant reduction in mean fractional anisotropy from 0.32 ± 0.02 to 0.28 ± 0.02, as well as a significant rightward shift in helix angles with a decrease in the proportion of left-handed fibres, as referring to the locally prevailing cell orientation in the heart, from 24.9% to 23.3%, and an increase in the proportion of right-handed fibres from 25.5% to 28.4%. LV overload, in contrast, gave rise to a decrease in the proportion of left-handed fibres from 24.9% to 21.4% and an increase in the proportion of right-handed fibres from 25.5% to 26.0%. The modified perfusion and coil setup offers better performance and control over cardiac contraction states. We subsequently performed high-resolution diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) and 3D whole heart fibre tracking in fixed ex vivo rat hearts in slack state and contracture. As a model-free method, DSI augmented the measurements of water diffusion by also informing on multiple intra-voxel diffusion orientations and non-Gaussian diffusion. This enabled us to identify the transition from right- to left-handed fibres from the subendocardium to the subepicardium, as well as voxels in apical regions that were traversed by multiple fibres. We observed that both the mean generalised fractional anisotropy and mean kurtosis were lower in hearts in contracture compared to the slack state, by 23% and 9.3%, respectively. While its heavy acquisition burden currently limits the application of DSI in vivo, ongoing work in acceleration techniques may enable its use in live animals and patients. This would provide access to the as yet unexplored dimension of non-Gaussian diffusion that could serve as a highly sensitive marker of cardiac micro-structural integrity.
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spelling pubmed-42106652014-11-06 Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging Lohezic, Maelene Teh, Irvin Bollensdorff, Christian Peyronnet, Rémi Hales, Patrick W. Grau, Vicente Kohl, Peter Schneider, Jürgen E. Prog Biophys Mol Biol Original Research Diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals valuable insights into tissue histo-anatomy and microstructure, and has steadily gained traction in the cardiac community. Its wider use in small animal cardiac imaging in vivo has been constrained by its extreme sensitivity to motion, exaggerated by the high heart rates usually seen in rodents. Imaging of the isolated heart eliminates respiratory motion and, if conducted on arrested hearts, cardiac pulsation. This serves as an important intermediate step for basic and translational studies. However, investigating the micro-structural basis of cardiac deformation in the same heart requires observations in different deformation states. Here, we illustrate the imaging of isolated rat hearts in three mechanical states mimicking diastole (cardioplegic arrest), left-ventricular (LV) volume overload (cardioplegic arrest plus LV balloon inflation), and peak systole (lithium-induced contracture). An optimised MRI-compatible Langendorff perfusion setup with the radio-frequency (RF) coil integrated into the wet chamber was developed for use in a 9.4T horizontal bore scanner. Signal-to-noise ratio improved significantly, by 75% compared to a previous design with external RF coil, and stability tests showed no significant changes in mean T(1), T(2) or LV wall thickness over a 170 min period. In contracture, we observed a significant reduction in mean fractional anisotropy from 0.32 ± 0.02 to 0.28 ± 0.02, as well as a significant rightward shift in helix angles with a decrease in the proportion of left-handed fibres, as referring to the locally prevailing cell orientation in the heart, from 24.9% to 23.3%, and an increase in the proportion of right-handed fibres from 25.5% to 28.4%. LV overload, in contrast, gave rise to a decrease in the proportion of left-handed fibres from 24.9% to 21.4% and an increase in the proportion of right-handed fibres from 25.5% to 26.0%. The modified perfusion and coil setup offers better performance and control over cardiac contraction states. We subsequently performed high-resolution diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) and 3D whole heart fibre tracking in fixed ex vivo rat hearts in slack state and contracture. As a model-free method, DSI augmented the measurements of water diffusion by also informing on multiple intra-voxel diffusion orientations and non-Gaussian diffusion. This enabled us to identify the transition from right- to left-handed fibres from the subendocardium to the subepicardium, as well as voxels in apical regions that were traversed by multiple fibres. We observed that both the mean generalised fractional anisotropy and mean kurtosis were lower in hearts in contracture compared to the slack state, by 23% and 9.3%, respectively. While its heavy acquisition burden currently limits the application of DSI in vivo, ongoing work in acceleration techniques may enable its use in live animals and patients. This would provide access to the as yet unexplored dimension of non-Gaussian diffusion that could serve as a highly sensitive marker of cardiac micro-structural integrity. Pergamon Press 2014-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4210665/ /pubmed/25117498 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2014.08.002 Text en © 2014 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) .
spellingShingle Original Research
Lohezic, Maelene
Teh, Irvin
Bollensdorff, Christian
Peyronnet, Rémi
Hales, Patrick W.
Grau, Vicente
Kohl, Peter
Schneider, Jürgen E.
Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
title Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
title_full Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
title_fullStr Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
title_full_unstemmed Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
title_short Interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
title_sort interrogation of living myocardium in multiple static deformation states with diffusion tensor and diffusion spectrum imaging
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4210665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25117498
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2014.08.002
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