Highly accelerated free-breathing real-time myocardial tagging for exercise cardiovascular magnetic resonance

Author:

Morales Manuel A.ORCID,Yoon Siyeop,Fahmy Ahmed,Ghanbari Fahime,Nakamori Shiro,Rodriguez Jennifer,Yue Jennifer,Street Jordan A.,Herzka Daniel A.,Manning Warren J.,Nezafat Reza

Abstract

Abstract Background Exercise cardiovascular magnetic resonance (Ex-CMR) myocardial tagging would enable quantification of myocardial deformation after exercise. However, current electrocardiogram (ECG)-segmented sequences are limited for Ex-CMR. Methods We developed a highly accelerated balanced steady-state free-precession real-time tagging technique for 3 T. A 12-fold acceleration was achieved using incoherent sixfold random Cartesian sampling, twofold truncated outer phase encoding, and a deep learning resolution enhancement model. The technique was tested in two prospective studies. In a rest study of 27 patients referred for clinical CMR and 19 healthy subjects, a set of ECG-segmented for comparison and two sets of real-time tagging images for repeatability assessment were collected in 2-chamber and short-axis views with spatiotemporal resolution 2.0 × 2.0 mm2 and 29 ms. In an Ex-CMR study of 26 patients with known or suspected cardiac disease and 23 healthy subjects, real-time images were collected before and after exercise. Deformation was quantified using measures of short-axis global circumferential strain (GCS). Two experienced CMR readers evaluated the image quality of all real-time data pooled from both studies using a 4-point Likert scale for tagline quality (1-excellent; 2-good; 3-moderate; 4-poor) and artifact level (1-none; 2-minimal; 3-moderate; 4-significant). Statistical evaluation included Pearson correlation coefficient (r), intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and coefficient of variation (CoV). Results In the rest study, deformation was successfully quantified in 90% of cases. There was a good correlation (r = 0.71) between ECG-segmented and real-time measures of GCS, and repeatability was good to excellent (ICC = 0.86 [0.71, 0.94]) with a CoV of 4.7%. In the Ex-CMR study, deformation was successfully quantified in 96% of subjects pre-exercise and 84% of subjects post-exercise. Short-axis and 2-chamber tagline quality were 1.6 ± 0.7 and 1.9 ± 0.8 at rest and 1.9 ± 0.7 and 2.5 ± 0.8 after exercise, respectively. Short-axis and 2-chamber artifact level was 1.2 ± 0.5 and 1.4 ± 0.7 at rest and 1.3 ± 0.6 and 1.5 ± 0.8 post-exercise, respectively. Conclusion We developed a highly accelerated real-time tagging technique and demonstrated its potential for Ex-CMR quantification of myocardial deformation. Further studies are needed to assess the clinical utility of our technique.

Funder

National Heart Lung and Blood Institute

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology

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