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Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views

The conventional approach to cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) involving breath holds, electrocardiography-gating, and acquisition of a short-axis (SAX) image stack, introduces technical and logistical challenges for assessing exercise left ventricular (LV) function. Real-time, free-breathing CMR acq...

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Autores principales: Kirkham, Amy A., Goonasekera, Michelle V., Mattiello, Brenna C., Grenier, Justin G., Haykowsky, Mark J., Thompson, Richard B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7861545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33539447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0245912
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author Kirkham, Amy A.
Goonasekera, Michelle V.
Mattiello, Brenna C.
Grenier, Justin G.
Haykowsky, Mark J.
Thompson, Richard B.
author_facet Kirkham, Amy A.
Goonasekera, Michelle V.
Mattiello, Brenna C.
Grenier, Justin G.
Haykowsky, Mark J.
Thompson, Richard B.
author_sort Kirkham, Amy A.
collection PubMed
description The conventional approach to cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) involving breath holds, electrocardiography-gating, and acquisition of a short-axis (SAX) image stack, introduces technical and logistical challenges for assessing exercise left ventricular (LV) function. Real-time, free-breathing CMR acquisition of long-axis (LAX) images overcomes these issues and also enables assessment of global longitudinal strain (GLS). We evaluated the reliability of a free-breathing LAX approach compared to the standard SAX approach and the reproducibility of free-breathing LAX. LV SAX (contiguous stack) and LAX (two-chamber and four-chamber) 3T CMR cine images were acquired four times within one scan in 32 women with cardiovascular risk factors (56±10 years, 28±4 kg/m(2)) as follows: 1) resting, gated-segmented, end-expiration breath-hold; 2) resting, real-time, free-breathing; 3) test-retest set of resting, real-time, free-breathing; 4) peak exercise (incremental-to-maximum, in-magnet, stepper test), real-time, free-breathing. A second scan was performed within one week in a subset (n = 5) to determine reproducibility of peak exercise measures. Reliability and agreement of the free-breathing LAX approach with the conventional SAX approach were assessed by intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and Bland-Altman plots, respectively. Normal control GLS reserve was also acquired in a separate set of 12 young, healthy control women (25±4 years, 22±2 kg/m(2)) for comparison. Comparisons of LV volumes and function among all techniques at rest had good-to-excellent reliability (ICC = 0.80–0.96), and excellent reliability between peak exercise free-breathing LAX and SAX evaluations (ICC = 0.92–0.96). Higher resting heart rates with free-breathing acquisitions compared to breath-hold (mean difference, limits of agreement: 5, 1–12 beats per minute) reduced reliability for cardiac output (ICC = 0.67–0.79). Reproducibility of the free-breathing LAX approach was good-to-excellent at rest and peak exercise (ICC = 0.74–0.99). GLS exercise reserve was impaired in older women at cardiovascular risk compared to young healthy women (-4.7±2.3% vs -7.4±2.1%, p = 0.001). Real-time, free-breathing CMR with LAX evaluation provides a reliable and reproducible method to assess rest and peak exercise cardiac function, including GLS.
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spelling pubmed-78615452021-02-12 Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views Kirkham, Amy A. Goonasekera, Michelle V. Mattiello, Brenna C. Grenier, Justin G. Haykowsky, Mark J. Thompson, Richard B. PLoS One Research Article The conventional approach to cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) involving breath holds, electrocardiography-gating, and acquisition of a short-axis (SAX) image stack, introduces technical and logistical challenges for assessing exercise left ventricular (LV) function. Real-time, free-breathing CMR acquisition of long-axis (LAX) images overcomes these issues and also enables assessment of global longitudinal strain (GLS). We evaluated the reliability of a free-breathing LAX approach compared to the standard SAX approach and the reproducibility of free-breathing LAX. LV SAX (contiguous stack) and LAX (two-chamber and four-chamber) 3T CMR cine images were acquired four times within one scan in 32 women with cardiovascular risk factors (56±10 years, 28±4 kg/m(2)) as follows: 1) resting, gated-segmented, end-expiration breath-hold; 2) resting, real-time, free-breathing; 3) test-retest set of resting, real-time, free-breathing; 4) peak exercise (incremental-to-maximum, in-magnet, stepper test), real-time, free-breathing. A second scan was performed within one week in a subset (n = 5) to determine reproducibility of peak exercise measures. Reliability and agreement of the free-breathing LAX approach with the conventional SAX approach were assessed by intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and Bland-Altman plots, respectively. Normal control GLS reserve was also acquired in a separate set of 12 young, healthy control women (25±4 years, 22±2 kg/m(2)) for comparison. Comparisons of LV volumes and function among all techniques at rest had good-to-excellent reliability (ICC = 0.80–0.96), and excellent reliability between peak exercise free-breathing LAX and SAX evaluations (ICC = 0.92–0.96). Higher resting heart rates with free-breathing acquisitions compared to breath-hold (mean difference, limits of agreement: 5, 1–12 beats per minute) reduced reliability for cardiac output (ICC = 0.67–0.79). Reproducibility of the free-breathing LAX approach was good-to-excellent at rest and peak exercise (ICC = 0.74–0.99). GLS exercise reserve was impaired in older women at cardiovascular risk compared to young healthy women (-4.7±2.3% vs -7.4±2.1%, p = 0.001). Real-time, free-breathing CMR with LAX evaluation provides a reliable and reproducible method to assess rest and peak exercise cardiac function, including GLS. Public Library of Science 2021-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7861545/ /pubmed/33539447 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0245912 Text en © 2021 Kirkham et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kirkham, Amy A.
Goonasekera, Michelle V.
Mattiello, Brenna C.
Grenier, Justin G.
Haykowsky, Mark J.
Thompson, Richard B.
Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
title Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
title_full Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
title_fullStr Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
title_full_unstemmed Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
title_short Reliability and reproducibility of cardiac MRI quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
title_sort reliability and reproducibility of cardiac mri quantification of peak exercise function with long-axis views
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7861545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33539447
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0245912
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