AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper discusses the importance of hemodynamic recording during interventional cardiovascular procedures and the challenges posed by electromagnetic interference (EMI) in MRI environments.
  • It outlines the development of a new system designed to minimize EMI effects on electrocardiogram (ECG) and invasive blood pressure (IBP) signals using MRI-compatible equipment and adaptive signal processing techniques.
  • Results showed an impressive 80% reduction in peak noise and the elimination of false QRS triggers during real-time MRI scanning in pediatric patients, paving the way for better high-fidelity recordings in MRI-guided procedures.

Article Abstract

Hemodynamic recording during interventional cardiovascular procedures is essential for procedural guidance, monitoring patient status, and collection of diagnostic information. Recent advances have made interventions guided by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) possible and attractive in certain clinical scenarios. However, in the MRI environment, electromagnetic interference (EMI) can cause severe distortions and artifacts in acquired hemodynamic waveforms. The primary aim of this paper was to develop and validate a system to minimize EMI on electrocardiogram (ECG) and invasive blood pressure (IBP) signals. A system was developed which incorporated commercial MRI compatible ECG leads and pressure transducers, custom electronics, user interface, and adaptive signal processing. Measurements were made on pediatric patients (N = 6) during MRI-guided catheterization. Real-time interactive scanning, which is known to produce significant EMI due to fast gradient switching and varying imaging plane orientations, was selected for testing. The effectiveness of the adaptive algorithms was determined by measuring the reduction of noise peaks, amplitude of noise peaks, and false QRS triggers. During real-time gradient-intensive imaging sequences, peak noise amplitude was reduced by 80% and false QRS triggers were reduced to a median of 0. There was no detectable interference on the IBP channels. A hemodynamic recording system front-end was successfully developed and deployed, which enabled high-fidelity recording of ECG and IBP during MRI scanning. The schematics and assembly instructions are publicly available to facilitate implementation at other institutions. Researchers and clinicians are provided a critical tool in investigating and implementing MRI guided interventional cardiovascular procedures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5849467PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JTEHM.2018.2807813DOI Listing

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