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Dive into the research topics where Carl-Johan Carlhäll is active.

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Featured researches published by Carl-Johan Carlhäll.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2007

Transit of Blood Flow Through the Human Left Ventricle Mapped by Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance

Einar Heiberg; Matts Karlsson; Lars Wigström; Jan Engvall; Andreas Sigfridsson; Tino Ebbers; John-Peder Escobar Kvitting; Carl-Johan Carlhäll; Bengt Wranne

BACKGROUND The transit of blood through the beating heart is a basic aspect of cardiovascular physiology which remains incompletely studied. Quantification of the components of multidirectional flow in the normal left ventricle (LV) is lacking, making it difficult to put the changes observed with LV dysfunction and cardiac surgery into context. METHODS Three dimensional, three directional, time resolved magnetic resonance phase-contrast velocity mapping was performed at 1.5 Tesla in 17 normal subjects, 6 female, aged 44+/-14 years (mean+/-SD). We visualized and measured the relative volumes of LV flow components and the diastolic changes in inflowing kinetic energy (KE). Of total diastolic inflow volume, 44+/-11% followed a direct, albeit curved route to systolic ejection (videos 1 and 2), in contrast to 11% in a subject with mildly dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), who was included for preliminary comparison (video 3). In normals, 16+/-8% of the KE of inflow was conserved to the end of diastole, compared with 5% in the DCM patient. Blood following the direct route lost or transferred less of its KE during diastole than blood that was retained until the next beat (1.6+/-1.0 millijoules vs 8.2+/-1.9 millijoules, p<0.05); whereas, in the DCM patient, the reduction in KE of retained inflow was 18-fold greater than that of the blood tracing the direct route. CONCLUSION Multidimensional flow mapping can measure the paths, compartmentalization and kinetic energy changes of blood flowing into the LV, demonstrating differences of KE loss between compartments, and potentially between the flows in normal and dilated left ventricles.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2010

Semi-automatic quantification of 4D left ventricular blood flow

Jonatan Eriksson; Carl-Johan Carlhäll; Petter Dyverfeldt; Jan Engvall; Tino Ebbers

BackgroundThe beating heart is the generator of blood flow through the cardiovascular system. Within the hearts own chambers, normal complex blood flow patterns can be disturbed by diseases. Methods for the quantification of intra-cardiac blood flow, with its 4D (3D+time) nature, are lacking. We sought to develop and validate a novel semi-automatic analysis approach that integrates flow and morphological data.MethodIn six healthy subjects and three patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, three-directional, three-dimensional cine phase-contrast cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) velocity data and balanced steady-state free-precession long- and short-axis images were acquired. The LV endocardium was segmented from the short-axis images at the times of isovolumetric contraction (IVC) and isovolumetric relaxation (IVR). At the time of IVC, pathlines were emitted from the IVC LV blood volume and traced forwards and backwards in time until IVR, thus including the entire cardiac cycle. The IVR volume was used to determine if and where the pathlines left the LV. This information was used to automatically separate the pathlines into four different components of flow: Direct Flow, Retained Inflow, Delayed Ejection Flow and Residual Volume. Blood volumes were calculated for every component by multiplying the number of pathlines with the blood volume represented by each pathline. The accuracy and inter- and intra-observer reproducibility of the approach were evaluated by analyzing volumes of LV inflow and outflow, the four flow components, and the end-diastolic volume.ResultsThe volume and distribution of the LV flow components were determined in all subjects. The calculated LV outflow volumes [ml] (67 ± 13) appeared to fall in between those obtained by through-plane phase-contrast CMR (77 ± 16) and Doppler ultrasound (58 ± 10), respectively. Calculated volumes of LV inflow (68 ± 11) and outflow (67 ± 13) were well matched (NS). Low inter- and intra-observer variability for the assessment of the volumes of the flow components was obtained.ConclusionsThis semi-automatic analysis approach for the quantification of 4D blood flow resulted in accurate LV inflow and outflow volumes and a high reproducibility for the assessment of LV flow components.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2010

Passing Strange Flow in the Failing Ventricle

Carl-Johan Carlhäll

Heart failure is diverse in its manifestations and pathophysiology with changes in chamber size and volume, wall motion, valvular competence, intracardiac pressures, and electrical events. These are routinely measured with well-established methods. However, it is common to observe different degrees of compensation despite echocardiographically similar degrees of cardiac dysfunction. How can we explain this phenomenon? One persistent gap in our understanding of the failing heart is the global behavior of the intracardiac blood flow and its potential impact on pump efficiency and disease progression. The concepts that ventricular filling and ejection are separate events distinct in timing and location and that acceleration and ejection of the stroke volume are only events due to systolic myocardial contraction are familiar but likely oversimplified. It seems reasonable that rather than coming to a halt at end diastole, flowing blood would keep moving as filling transitions to ejection and that it would be efficient for blood in the end-diastolic left ventricle (LV) to already be moving toward the aortic valve for ejection. Until recently, there was a lack of measurement tools able to accurately resolve the complex in vivo 3D flow fields to investigate these and other flow-based questions. New tools that can measure 3D flow throughout the cardiac cycle noninvasively are becoming increasingly mature, and a more detailed perspective is emerging on the organization of intracardiac blood flow. It is now possible to investigate the routes, behaviors, and interactions of the blood transiting the ventricles in normal and failing hearts1–3 and to consider the possible impact of flow characteristics on the efficiency of ventricular function. A focus on the flow aspects of cardiac function allows us to address a new and complementary set of questions. How does the efficiency of flow through the heart change with chamber dimensions, shape, and wall properties, …


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Quantification of presystolic blood flow organization and energetics in the human left ventricle

Jonatan Eriksson; Petter Dyverfeldt; Jan Engvall; Tino Ebbers; Carl-Johan Carlhäll

Intracardiac blood flow patterns are potentially important to cardiac pumping efficiency. However, these complex flow patterns remain incompletely characterized both in health and disease. We hypothesized that normal left ventricular (LV) blood flow patterns would preferentially optimize a portion of the end-diastolic volume (LVEDV) for effective and rapid systolic ejection by virtue of location near and motion towards the LV outflow tract (LVOT). Three-dimensional cine velocity and morphological data were acquired in 12 healthy persons and 1 patient with dilated cardiomyopathy using MRI. A previously validated method was used for analysis in which the LVEDV was separated into four functional flow components based on the bloods locations at the beginning and end of the cardiac cycle. Each components volume, kinetic energy (KE), site, direction, and linear momentum relative to the LVOT were calculated. Of the four components, the LV inflow that passes directly to outflow in a single cardiac cycle (Direct Flow) had the largest volume. At the time of isovolumic contraction, Direct Flow had the greatest amount of KE and the most favorable combination of distance, angle, and linear momentum relative to the LVOT. Atrial contraction boosted the late diastolic KE of the ejected components. We conclude that normal diastolic LV flow creates favorable conditions for ensuing ejection, defined by proximity and energetics, for the Direct Flow, and that atrial contraction augments the end-diastolic KE of the ejection volume. The correlation of Direct Flow characteristics with ejection efficiency might be a relevant investigative target in cardiac failure.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

4-D blood flow in the human right ventricle

Alexandru Grigorescu Fredriksson; Jakub Zajac; Jonatan Eriksson; Petter Dyverfeldt; Tino Ebbers; Carl-Johan Carlhäll

Right ventricular (RV) function is a powerful prognostic indicator in many forms of heart disease, but its assessment remains challenging and inexact. RV dysfunction may alter the normal patterns of RV blood flow, but those patterns have been incompletely characterized. We hypothesized that, based on anatomic differences, the proportions and energetics of RV flow components would differ from those identified in the left ventricle (LV) and that the portion of the RV inflow passing directly to outflow (Direct Flow) would be prepared for effective systolic ejection as a result of preserved kinetic energy (KE) compared with other RV flow components. Three-dimensional, time-resolved phase-contrast velocity, and balanced steady-state free-precession morphological data were acquired in 10 healthy subjects using MRI. A previously validated method was used to separate the RV and LV end-diastolic volumes into four flow components and measure their volume and KE over the cardiac cycle. The RV Direct Flow: 1) followed a smoothly curving route that did not extend into the apical region of the ventricle; 2) had a larger volume and possessed a larger presystolic KE (0.4 ± 0.3 mJ) than the other flow components (P < 0.001 and P < 0.01, respectively); and 3) represented a larger part of the end-diastolic blood volume compared with the LV Direct Flow (P < 0.01). These findings suggest that diastolic flow patterns distinct to the normal RV create favorable conditions for ensuing systolic ejection of the Direct Flow component. These flow-specific aspects of RV diastolic-systolic coupling provide novel perspectives on RV physiology and may add to the understanding of RV pathophysiology.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2013

Four-dimensional blood flow-specific markers of LV dysfunction in dilated cardiomyopathy

Jonatan Eriksson; Tino Ebbers; Carl-Johan Carlhäll

Aims Patients with mild heart failure (HF) who are clinically compensated may have normal left ventricular (LV) stroke volume (SV). Despite this, altered intra-ventricular flow patterns have been recognized in these subjects. We hypothesized that, compared with normal LVs, flow in myopathic LVs would demonstrate a smaller proportion of inflow volume passing directly to ejection and diminished the end-diastolic preservation of the inflow kinetic energy (KE). Methods and results In 10 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) (49 ± 14 years, six females) and 10 healthy subjects (44 ± 17 years, four females), four-dimensional MRI velocity and morphological data were acquired. A previously validated method was used to separate the LV end-diastolic volume (EDV) into four flow components based on the bloods locations at the beginning and end of the cardiac cycle. KE was calculated over the cardiac cycle for each component. The EDV was larger (P = 0.021) and the ejection fraction smaller (P < 0.001) in DCM compared with healthy subjects; the SV was equivalent (DCM: 77 ± 19, healthy: 79 ± 16 mL). The proportion of the total LV inflow that passed directly to ejection was smaller in DCM (P = 0.000), but the end-diastolic KE/mL of the direct flow was not different in the two groups (NS). Conclusion Despite equivalent LVSVs, HF patients with mild LV remodelling demonstrate altered diastolic flow routes through the LV and impaired preservation of inflow KE at pre-systole compared with healthy subjects. These unique flow-specific changes in the flow route and energetics are detectable despite clinical compensation, and may prove useful as subclinical markers of LV dysfunction.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2012

Four-Dimensional Flow MRI Using Spiral Acquisition

Andreas Sigfridsson; Sven Petersson; Carl-Johan Carlhäll; Tino Ebbers

Time‐resolved three‐dimensional phase‐contrast MRI is an important tool for physiological as well as clinical studies of blood flow in the heart and vessels. The application of the technique is, however, limited by the long scan times required. In this work, we investigate the feasibility of using spiral readouts to reduce the scan time of four‐dimensional flow MRI without sacrificing quality. Three spiral approaches are presented and evaluated in vivo and in vitro against a conventional Cartesian acquisition. In vivo, the performance of each method was assessed in the thoracic aorta in 10 volunteers using pathline‐based analysis and cardiac output analysis. Signal‐to‐noise ratio and background phase errors were investigated in vitro. Using spiral readouts, the scan times of a four‐dimensional flow acquisition of the thoracic aorta could be reduced 2–3‐fold, with no statistically significant difference in pathline validity or cardiac output. The shortened scan time improves the applicability of four‐dimensional flow MRI, which may allow the technique to become a part of a clinical workflow for cardiovascular functional imaging. Magn Reson Med, 2012.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2008

The effect of pure mitral regurgitation on mitral annular geometry and three-dimensional saddle shape

Tom C. Nguyen; Akinobu Itoh; Carl-Johan Carlhäll; Wolfgang Bothe; Tomasz A. Timek; Daniel B. Ennis; Robert A Oakes; David Liang; George T. Daughters; Neil B. Ingels; D. Craig Miller

OBJECTIVE Chronic ischemic mitral regurgitation is associated with mitral annular dilatation in the septal-lateral dimension and flattening of the annular 3-dimensional saddle shape. To examine whether these perturbations are caused by the ischemic insult, mitral regurgitation, or both, we investigated the effects of pure mitral regurgitation (low pressure volume overload) on annular geometry and shape. METHODS Eight radiopaque markers were sutured evenly around the mitral annulus in sheep randomized to control (CTRL, n = 8) or experimental (HOLE, n = 12) groups. In HOLE, a 3.5- to 4.8-mm hole was punched in the posterior leaflet to generate pure mitral regurgitation. Four-dimensional marker coordinates were obtained radiographically 1 and 12 weeks postoperatively. Mitral annular area, annular septal-lateral and commissure-commissure dimensions, and annular height were calculated every 16.7 ms. RESULTS Mitral regurgitation grade was 0.4 +/- 0.4 in CTRL and 3.0 +/- 0.8 in HOLE (P < .001) at 12 weeks. End-diastolic left ventricular volume index was greater in HOLE at both 1 and 12 weeks; end-systolic volume index was larger in HOLE at 12 weeks. Mitral annular area increased in HOLE predominantly in the commissure-commissure dimension, with no difference in annular height between HOLE versus CTRL at 1 or 12 weeks, respectively. CONCLUSION In contrast with annular septal-lateral dilatation and flattening of the annular saddle shape observed with chronic ischemic mitral regurgitation, pure mitral regurgitation was associated with commissure-commissure dimension annular dilatation and no change in annular shape. Thus, infarction is a more important determinant of septal-lateral dilatation and annular shape than mitral regurgitation, which reinforces the need for disease-specific designs of annuloplasty rings.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Simultaneous three-dimensional myocardial T1 and T2 mapping in one breath hold with 3D-QALAS

Sofia Kvernby; Marcel Warntjes; Henrik Haraldsson; Carl-Johan Carlhäll; Jan Engvall; Tino Ebbers

BackgroundQuantification of the longitudinal- and transverse relaxation time in the myocardium has shown to provide important information in cardiac diagnostics. Methods for cardiac relaxation time mapping generally demand a long breath hold to measure either T1 or T2 in a single 2D slice. In this paper we present and evaluate a novel method for 3D interleaved T1 and T2 mapping of the whole left ventricular myocardium within a single breath hold of 15 heartbeats.MethodsThe 3D-QALAS (3D-quantification using an interleaved Look-Locker acquisition sequence with T2 preparation pulse) is based on a 3D spoiled Turbo Field Echo sequence using inversion recovery with interleaved T2 preparation. Quantification of both T1 and T2 in a volume of 13 slices with a resolution of 2.0x2.0x6.0 mm is obtained from five measurements by using simulations of the longitudinal magnetizations Mz. This acquisition scheme is repeated three times to sample k-space. The method was evaluated both in-vitro (validated against Inversion Recovery and Multi Echo) and in-vivo (validated against MOLLI and Dual Echo).ResultsIn-vitro, a strong relation was found between 3D-QALAS and Inversion Recovery (R = 0.998; N = 10; p < 0.01) and between 3D-QALAS and Multi Echo (R = 0.996; N = 10; p < 0.01). The 3D-QALAS method showed no dependence on e.g. heart rate in the interval of 40–120 bpm. In healthy myocardium, the mean T1 value was 1083 ± 43 ms (mean ± SD) for 3D-QALAS and 1089 ± 54 ms for MOLLI, while the mean T2 value was 50.4 ± 3.6 ms 3D-QALAS and 50.3 ± 3.5 ms for Dual Echo. No significant difference in in-vivo relaxation times was found between 3D-QALAS and MOLLI (N = 10; p = 0.65) respectively 3D-QALAS and Dual Echo (N = 10; p = 0.925) for the ten healthy volunteers.ConclusionsThe 3D-QALAS method has demonstrated good accuracy and intra-scan variability both in-vitro and in-vivo. It allows rapid acquisition and provides quantitative information of both T1 and T2 relaxation times in the same scan with full coverage of the left ventricle, enabling clinical application in a broader spectrum of cardiac disorders.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2015

Turbulent kinetic energy in normal and myopathic left ventricles

Jakub Zajac; Jonatan Eriksson; Petter Dyverfeldt; Tino Ebbers; Carl-Johan Carlhäll

To assess turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) within the left ventricle (LV) of healthy subjects using novel 4D flow magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods and to compare TKE values to those from a limited group of patients with a spectrum of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM).

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Neil B. Ingels

Palo Alto Medical Foundation

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Andreas Sigfridsson

Karolinska University Hospital

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Tom C. Nguyen

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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