Scientific Reports | 2021

Measuring myocardial extracellular volume of the right ventricle in patients with congenital heart disease

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The right ventricle´s\xa0(RV) characteristics—thin walls and trabeculation—make it challenging to evaluate extracellular volume\xa0(ECV). We aimed to assess the feasibility of RV ECV measurements in congenital heart disease\xa0(CHD), and to introduce a novel ECV analysis tool. Patients (n\u2009=\u200939) and healthy controls\xa0(n\u2009=\u200917) underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance T1 mapping in midventricular short axis (SAX) and transverse orientation\xa0(TRANS). Regions of interest\xa0(ROIs) were evaluated with regard to image quality\xa0and maximum RV wall thickness per ROI in pixels. ECV from plane ROIs was compared with values obtained with a custom-made tool that derives the mean T1 values from a “line of interest” (LOI) centered in the RV wall. In CHD, average image quality was good (no artifacts in the RV, good contrast between blood/myocardium), and RV wall thickness was 1–2 pixels. RV\xa0ECV was not quantifiable in 4/39 patients due to insufficient contrast or wall thickness\u2009<\u20091\xa0pixel. RV\xa0myocardium tended to be more clearly delineated in SAX than TRANS. ECV from ROIs and corresponding LOIs correlated strongly in both directions (SAX/TRANS: r\u2009=\u20090.97/0.87, p \u2009<\u20090.001, respectively). In conclusion, RV ECV can be assessed if image quality allows sufficient distinction between myocardium and blood, and RV wall thickness per ROI is\u2009≥\u20091\xa0pixel. T1 maps in SAX are recommended for RV\xa0ECV analysis. LOI application simplifies RV ECV measurements.

Volume 11
Pages None
DOI 10.1038/s41598-021-81440-z
Language English
Journal Scientific Reports

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