Assessment of transmitral and left atrial appendage flow rate from cardiac 4D-CT.

Commun Med (Lond)

Unit of Cardiovascular Sciences, Department of Health, Medicine and Caring Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiac time-resolved CT (4D-CT) is useful for getting clear anatomical images of the heart but lacks accurate methods for assessing blood flow in conditions like diastolic dysfunction and atrial fibrillation.
  • * Researchers created a motion tracking algorithm that differentiates blood flow in the mitral valve and left atrial appendage using 4D-CT images, improving accuracy over previous methods.
  • * The new algorithm showed promising results, with similarities in flow measurements between the 4D-CT and MRI methods, particularly for the mitral valve and left atrial appendage, indicating its potential for clinical use.

Article Abstract

Background: Cardiac time-resolved CT (4D-CT) acquisitions provide high quality anatomical images of the heart. However, some cardiac diseases require assessment of blood flow in the heart. Diastolic dysfunction, for instance, is diagnosed by measuring the flow through the mitral valve (MV), while in atrial fibrillation, the flow through the left atrial appendage (LAA) indicates the risk for thrombus formation. Accurate validated techniques to extract this information from 4D-CT have been lacking, however.

Methods: To measure the flow rate though the MV and the LAA from 4D-CT, we developed a motion tracking algorithm that performs a nonrigid deformation of the surface separating the blood pool from the myocardium. To improve the tracking of the LAA, this region was deformed separately from the left atrium and left ventricle. We compared the CT based flow with 4D flow and short axis MRI data from the same individual in 9 patients.

Results: For the mitral valve flow, good agreement was found for the time span between the early and late diastolic peak flow (bias: <0.1 s). The ventricular stroke volume is similar compared to short-axis MRI (bias 3 ml). There are larger differences in the diastolic peak flow rates, with a larger bias for the early flow rate than the late flow rate. The peak LAA outflow rate measured with both modalities matches well (bias: -6 ml/s).

Conclusions: Overall, the developed algorithm provides accurate tracking of dynamic cardiac geometries resulting in similar flow rates at the MV and LAA compared to 4D flow MRI.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9922288PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s43856-023-00252-6DOI Listing

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