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an mri examination for evaluation of aortic dissection using a blood pool agent

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Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance BioMed Central Open Access Oral presentation An MRI examination for evaluation of aortic dissection using a blood pool agent Rachel Clough*, Tarique Hussain, Sergio Uribe, Peter Taylor, Reza Rezavi, Tobias Schaeffter and Matthew Waltham Address: NIHR Comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre of Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London, London, UK * Corresponding author from 13th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions Phoenix, AZ, USA 21-24 January 2010 Published: 21 January 2010 Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance 2010, 12(Suppl 1):O63 doi:10.1186/1532-429X-12-S1-O63

Abstracts of the 13th Annual SCMR Scientific Sessions - 2010

Meeting abstracts - A single PDF containing all abstracts in this Supplement is available here. http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/files/pdf/1532-429X-11-S1-info This abstract is available from: http://jcmr-online.com/content/12/S1/O63 © 2010 Clough et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd Introduction In aortic dissection the formation of thrombus in the false lumen is associated with improved survival [1] Current imaging using contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) assumes the presence of thrombus by the absence of contrast but due to altered flow this finding may not be accurate Purpose The aims of this study were to i) investigate the use of direct thrombus MRI together with 3D MRA using a blood pool agent to quantify false lumen thrombus volume in patients with Type B aortic dissection, and ii) compare the volumes to those obtained by clinical CT FA = 10°, TR/TE = 5.0/2.7 ms, 25 cardiac-phases, VENC = 250 cm/s) For blood-pool imaging, a respiratory-navigated ECG-triggered IR-3D SSFP sequence was used (FOV = 400 × 253 × 156 mm3, resolution = 1.5 mm3, FA = 20°, TI = 350 ms, TR/TE = 4.0/1.3 ms, TFE-factor = 22) The volume of thrombus was extracted from the different datasets (first pass MRA, blood pool MRI and first pass CT) by an expert using manual segmentation (ViewForum, Philips Healthcare) Areas of low signal on blood pool images were correlated with direct thrombus images Figure Methods Ten patients with Type B aortic dissection underwent MRI at 3.0 T (Philips Healthcare) with a 6-element cardiac coil After an initial survey and reference scan, direct thrombus imaging was performed by an inversion recovery (IR) ECG-triggered respiratory-navigated 3D TFE sequence (FOV: 300 × 255 × 60 mm3 with × × 2.5 mm3 resolution, TI = 490 ms, TFE-factor = 36, TR/TE = 3.2/1 ms) A blood-pool agent (Gadofosveset) (dose 0.12 ml/kg at ml/s) was injected and first-pass imaging performed by 3D CE MRA (FOV = 420 × 280 × 135 mm3, resolution = 1.8 mm3, FA = 35°, TR/TE = 6.0/1.8 ms), breathhold, without cardiac gating Two-dimensional flow analyses were performed at aortic levels (FOV = × × 10 mm3, Figure A ing lumen First food perfusion pass 1trueCR lumen (short MRA perfusion (MIP) arrow) with (long Gadofosveset, arrow) and poor demonstratfalse A First pass CR MRA (MIP) with Gadofosveset, demonstrating food true lumen perfusion (long arrow) and poor false lumen perfusion (short arrow) B: 3D Inversion Recovery SSFP blood pool imaging with visible distal entry tear (arrow) C: Direct thrombus (IR 3D-TFE sequence) imaging highlightng false lumen thrombus (long arrow) and distal entry tear (short arrow) Page of (page number not for citation purposes) Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance 2010, 12(Suppl 1):O63 http://jcmr-online.com/content/12/S1/O63 Results Analysis was feasible in all ten patients Flow evaluation in the true and false lumen showed altered and regurgitant flow The thrombus volumes derived from first pass 3D CE MRA and CT were significantly greater than those obtained with blood pool imaging The mean difference between first pass 3D CE MRA and blood pool imaging was 114.4 cm3 ((95%CI 60.04-168.7), p = 0.001), and between CT and blood pool imaging was 69.97 cm3 ((95%CI 14.33-125.60), p = 0.019) Thrombus location and morphology was confirmed by direct thrombus MRI in all patients Conclusion Blood pool imaging together with direct thrombus MRI allows assessment of aortic anatomy and quantification of false lumen thrombosis Current clinical trials using false lumen thrombosis as a primary endpoint should consider multi-parametric MRI as the preferred diagnostic tool References Bernard Y, et al.: Am J Cardiol 2001, 87(12):1378-82 Publish with Bio Med Central and every scientist can read your work free of charge "BioMed Central will be the most significant development for disseminating the results of biomedical researc h in our lifetime." Sir Paul Nurse, Cancer Research UK Your research papers will be: available free of charge to the entire biomedical community peer reviewed and published immediately upon acceptance cited in PubMed and archived on PubMed Central yours — you keep the copyright BioMedcentral Submit your manuscript here: http://www.biomedcentral.com/info/publishing_adv.asp Page of (page number not for citation purposes) ... morphology was confirmed by direct thrombus MRI in all patients Conclusion Blood pool imaging together with direct thrombus MRI allows assessment of aortic anatomy and quantification of false lumen...Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance 2010, 12(Suppl 1):O63 http://jcmr-online.com/content/12/S1/O63 Results Analysis was feasible in all ten patients Flow evaluation in the true and false... lumen showed altered and regurgitant flow The thrombus volumes derived from first pass 3D CE MRA and CT were significantly greater than those obtained with blood pool imaging The mean difference

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