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Featured researches published by Linyuan Jing.


European Journal of Echocardiography | 2014

Patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot suffer from intra- and inter-ventricular cardiac dyssynchrony: a cardiac magnetic resonance study

Linyuan Jing; Christopher M. Haggerty; Jonathan D. Suever; Sudad Alhadad; Ashwin Prakash; Frank Cecchin; Oskar M. Skrinjar; Tal Geva; Andrew J. Powell; Brandon K Fornwalt

AIMS Patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF) frequently have right bundle branch block. To better understand the contribution of cardiac dyssynchrony to dysfunction, we developed a method to quantify left (LV), right (RV), and inter-ventricular dyssynchrony using standard cine cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). METHODS AND RESULTS Thirty patients with rTOF and 17 healthy controls underwent cine CMR. Patients were imaged twice to assess inter-test reproducibility. Circumferential strain curves were generated with a custom feature-tracking algorithm for 12 LV and 12 RV segments in each of 4-7 short-axis slices encompassing the ventricles. Temporal offsets (TOs, in ms) of the strain curves relative to a patient-specific reference curve were calculated. The intra-ventricular dyssynchrony index (DI) for each ventricle was computed as the standard deviation of the TOs. The inter-ventricular DI was calculated as the difference in median RV and median LV TOs. Compared with controls, patients had a greater LV DI (21 ± 8 vs. 11 ± 5 ms, P < 0.001) and RV DI (60 ± 19 vs. 47 ± 17 ms, P = 0.02). RV contraction was globally delayed in patients, resulting in a greater inter-ventricular DI with the RV contracting 45 ± 25 ms later than the LV vs. 12 ± 29 ms earlier in controls (P < 0.001). Inter-test reproducibility was moderate with all coefficients of variation ≤22%. Both LV and RV DIs were correlated with measures of LV, but not RV, function. CONCLUSION Patients with rTOF have intra- and inter-ventricular dyssynchrony, which can be quantified from standard cine CMR. This new approach can potentially help determine the contribution of dyssynchrony to ventricular dysfunction in future studies.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2015

Validation of in vivo 2D Displacements from Spiral Cine DENSE at 3T

Gregory J. Wehner; Jonathan D. Suever; Christopher M. Haggerty; Linyuan Jing; David K. Powell; Sean M Hamlet; Jonathan D Grabau; Walter Dimitri Mojsejenko; Xiaodong Zhong; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K. Fornwalt

BackgroundDisplacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) encodes displacement into the phase of the magnetic resonance signal. Due to the stimulated echo, the signal is inherently low and fades through the cardiac cycle. To compensate, a spiral acquisition has been used at 1.5T. This spiral sequence has not been validated at 3T, where the increased signal would be valuable, but field inhomogeneities may result in measurement errors. We hypothesized that spiral cine DENSE is valid at 3T and tested this hypothesis by measuring displacement errors at both 1.5T and 3T in vivo.MethodsTwo-dimensional spiral cine DENSE and tagged imaging of the left ventricle were performed on ten healthy subjects at 3T and six healthy subjects at 1.5T. Intersection points were identified on tagged images near end-systole. Displacements from the DENSE images were used to project those points back to their origins. The deviation from a perfect grid was used as a measure of accuracy and quantified as root-mean-squared error. This measure was compared between 3T and 1.5T with the Wilcoxon rank sum test. Inter-observer variability of strains and torsion quantified by DENSE and agreement between DENSE and harmonic phase (HARP) were assessed by Bland-Altman analyses. The signal to noise ratio (SNR) at each cardiac phase was compared between 3T and 1.5T with the Wilcoxon rank sum test.ResultsThe displacement accuracy of spiral cine DENSE was not different between 3T and 1.5T (1.2 ± 0.3 mm and 1.2 ± 0.4 mm, respectively). Both values were lower than the DENSE pixel spacing of 2.8 mm. There were no substantial differences in inter-observer variability of DENSE or agreement of DENSE and HARP between 3T and 1.5T. Relative to 1.5T, the SNR at 3T was greater by a factor of 1.4 ± 0.3.ConclusionsThe spiral cine DENSE acquisition that has been used at 1.5T to measure cardiac displacements can be applied at 3T with equivalent accuracy. The inter-observer variability and agreement of DENSE-derived peak strains and torsion with HARP is also comparable at both field strengths. Future studies with spiral cine DENSE may take advantage of the additional SNR at 3T.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2016

Left and right ventricular dyssynchrony and strains from cardiovascular magnetic resonance feature tracking do not predict deterioration of ventricular function in patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot

Linyuan Jing; Gregory J. Wehner; Jonathan D. Suever; Richard Charnigo; Sudad Alhadad; Evan Stearns; Dimitri Mojsejenko; Christopher M. Haggerty; Kelsey Hickey; Anne Marie Valente; Tal Geva; Andrew J. Powell; Brandon K. Fornwalt

BackgroundPatients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF) suffer from progressive ventricular dysfunction decades after their surgical repair. We hypothesized that measures of ventricular strain and dyssynchrony would predict deterioration of ventricular function in patients with rTOF.MethodsA database search identified all patients at a single institution with rTOF who underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) at least twice, >6 months apart, without intervening surgical or catheter procedures. Seven primary predictors were derived from the first CMR using a custom feature tracking algorithm: left (LV), right (RV) and inter-ventricular dyssynchrony, LV and RV peak global circumferential strains, and LV and RV peak global longitudinal strains. Three outcomes were defined, whose changes were assessed over time: RV end-diastolic volume, and RV and LV ejection fraction. Multivariate linear mixed models were fit to investigate relationships of outcomes to predictors and ten potential baseline confounders.ResultsOne hundred fifty-three patients with rTOF (23 ± 14 years, 50 % male) were included. The mean follow-up duration between the first and last CMR was 2.9 ± 1.3 years. After adjustment for confounders, none of the 7 primary predictors were significantly associated with change over time in the 3 outcome variables. Only 1–17 % of the variability in the change over time in the outcome variables was explained by the baseline predictors and potential confounders.ConclusionsIn patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot, ventricular dyssynchrony and global strain derived from cine CMR were not significantly related to changes in ventricular size and function over time. The ability to predict deterioration in ventricular function in patients with rTOF using current methods is limited.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Simplified post processing of cine DENSE cardiovascular magnetic resonance for quantification of cardiac mechanics

Jonathan D. Suever; Gregory J. Wehner; Christopher M. Haggerty; Linyuan Jing; Sean M Hamlet; Cassi M Binkley; Sage P. Kramer; Andrea C. Mattingly; David K. Powell; Kenneth C Bilchick; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K. Fornwalt

BackgroundCardiovascular magnetic resonance using displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE) is capable of assessing advanced measures of cardiac mechanics such as strain and torsion. A potential hurdle to widespread clinical adoption of DENSE is the time required to manually segment the myocardium during post-processing of the images. To overcome this hurdle, we proposed a radical approach in which only three contours per image slice are required for post-processing (instead of the typical 30–40 contours per image slice). We hypothesized that peak left ventricular circumferential, longitudinal and radial strains and torsion could be accurately quantified using this simplified analysis.Methods and ResultsWe tested our hypothesis on a large multi-institutional dataset consisting of 541 DENSE image slices from 135 mice and 234 DENSE image slices from 62 humans. We compared measures of cardiac mechanics derived from the simplified post-processing to those derived from original post-processing utilizing the full set of 30–40 manually-defined contours per image slice. Accuracy was assessed with Bland-Altman limits of agreement and summarized with a modified coefficient of variation. The simplified technique showed high accuracy with all coefficients of variation less than 10% in humans and 6% in mice. The accuracy of the simplified technique was also superior to two previously published semi-automated analysis techniques for DENSE post-processing.ConclusionsAccurate measures of cardiac mechanics can be derived from DENSE cardiac magnetic resonance in both humans and mice using a simplified technique to reduce post-processing time by approximately 94%. These findings demonstrate that quantifying cardiac mechanics from DENSE data is simple enough to be integrated into the clinical workflow.


IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging | 2017

Right Ventricular Strain, Torsion, and Dyssynchrony in Healthy Subjects Using 3D Spiral Cine DENSE Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Jonathan D. Suever; Gregory J. Wehner; Linyuan Jing; David K. Powell; Sean M Hamlet; Jonathan D Grabau; Dimitri Mojsejenko; Kristin N. Andres; Christopher M. Haggerty; Brandon K. Fornwalt

Mechanics of the left ventricle (LV) are important indicators of cardiac function. The role of right ventricular (RV) mechanics is largely unknown due to the technical limitations of imaging its thin wall and complex geometry and motion. By combining 3D Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) with a post-processing pipeline that includes a local coordinate system, it is possible to quantify RV strain, torsion, and synchrony. In this study, we sought to characterize RV mechanics in 50 healthy individuals and compare these values to their LV counterparts. For each cardiac frame, 3D displacements were fit to continuous and differentiable radial basis functions, allowing for the computation of the 3D Cartesian Lagrangian strain tensor at any myocardial point. The geometry of the RV was extracted via a surface fit to manually delineated endocardial contours. Throughout the RV, a local coordinate system was used to transform from a Cartesian strain tensor to a polar strain tensor. It was then possible to compute peak RV torsion as well as peak longitudinal and circumferential strain. A comparable analysis was performed for the LV. Dyssynchrony was computed from the standard deviation of regional activation times. Global circumferential strain was comparable between the RV and LV (−18.0% for both) while longitudinal strain was greater in the RV (−18.1% vs. −15.7%). RV torsion was comparable to LV torsion (6.2 vs. 7.1 degrees, respectively). Regional activation times indicated that the RV contracted later but more synchronously than the LV. 3D spiral cine DENSE combined with a post–processing pipeline that includes a local coordinate system can resolve both the complex geometry and 3D motion of the RV.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2015

Children with obesity have cardiac remodeling and dysfunction: a cine DENSE magnetic resonance imaging study

Cassi M Binkley; Linyuan Jing; Jonathan D. Suever; Nivedita Umasankar; Gregory J. Wehner; Sean M Hamlet; David K. Powell; Aurelia Radulescu; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K Fornwalt

Background Obesity affects one in five children in the US and these children tend to maintain excess weight into adulthood. It has recently been shown that childhood obesity is associated with both cardiac remodeling (hypertrophy) and contractile dysfunction. However, the etiology of these cardiac changes is not well understood. We hypothesized that cardiac remodeling and dysfunction could not be entirely explained by elevations in blood pressure and that excess abdominal and epicardial adiposity may also correlate with cardiac changes.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2015

Left ventricular mechanical dysfunction in obesity is exacerbated during inotropic stress cine DENSE CMR in mice

Christopher M. Haggerty; Andrea C. Mattingly; Cassi M Binkley; Sage P. Kramer; Linyuan Jing; Jonathan D. Suever; David K. Powell; Richard Charnigo; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K Fornwalt

Background Obesity is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and mortality. Studies in both obese humans and murine models of obesity have identified changes in left ventricular (LV) mechanics (i.e., strains, strain rates, and torsion), which manifest prior to global changes in cardiac function (ejection fraction) and may represent early markers of cardiovascular disease. These data are generally acquired under resting conditions, which could mask subtle differences in the early stages of disease. We sought to evaluate LV mechanics under inotropic stress conditions with the hypothesis that mechanical deficiencies with obesity would be exacerbated under stress conditions and revealed at earlier stages of disease.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2015

Low encoding frequencies accurately quantify cardiac mechanics while minimizing phase wrapping in 2D cine DENSE with through-plane dephasing

Jonathan D Grabau; Gregory J. Wehner; Jonathan D. Suever; Christopher M. Haggerty; Linyuan Jing; David K. Powell; Sean M Hamlet; Xiaodong Zhong; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K Fornwalt

Background Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE) encodes displacement into the phase of the MR signal to quantify cardiac mechanics. The encoding frequency (ke) links myocardial displacement to phase. Studies with 2D cine DENSE have used ke of 0.10 cycles/mm, which is high enough to remove the stimulated anti-echo from the sampled k-space and is partially responsible for dephasing the blood signal. This ke leads to wrapping in the phase images and causes intra-voxel dephasing. With the advent of through-plane dephasing, the unwanted echo can be removed without relying on high ke. This may allow the use of lower ke to simplify post-processing and increase SNR. Low ke, however, may be less sensitive to displacement and result in inaccurate measures of cardiac mechanics. We hypothesized that ke below 0.10 cycles/mm will 1) provide accurate measures of cardiac mechanics, 2) minimize phase wrapping, 3) dephase the blood signal, and 4) improve SNR.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2014

Effect of variable breath-hold positions during cardiac magnetic resonance on measures of left ventricular mechanics

Sean M Hamlet; Gregory J. Wehner; Jonathan D. Suever; David K. Powell; Christopher M. Haggerty; Linyuan Jing; Xiaodong Zhong; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K Fornwalt

Background Measures of left ventricular cardiac mechanics such as strains and torsion are becoming increasingly important for assessing heart function. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) can be used to quantify cardiac mechanics using several methods such as tagged CMR or cine Displacement Encoding with Stimulated Echoes (DENSE). These images are generally acquired during an end-expiratory breath-hold. Unfortunately, it is difficult for subjects to hold their breath at the exact same position when undergoing a series of breath-holds during a typical CMR study. For example, end-expiratory breath-hold positions have an average range of about 8 millimeters (mm). The effects of different breath-hold positions on measures of cardiac mechanics have not been investigated. We hypothesized that the normal variability in breath-hold positions would significantly affect the quantification of left ventricular strains and torsion.


Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2014

High resolution cine displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE) at 3T with navigator feedback for quantification of cardiac mechanics

Gregory J. Wehner; Jonathan D. Suever; Christopher M. Haggerty; Linyuan Jing; David K. Powell; Xiaodong Zhong; Frederick H. Epstein; Brandon K Fornwalt

Background Measures of cardiac mechanics such as myocardial wall strain are better predictors of outcomes in patients with heart disease compared to traditional clinical measures and ejection fraction. Cine displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE) is an ideal method for quantifying cardiac motion which encodes tissue displacement in the phase of the MR signal and provides pixellevel resolution for quantifying cardiac mechanics. To date, DENSE has been implemented with resolution limited to 2-3 pixels across the myocardium. While this resolution is higher than most other techniques for quantifying cardiac mechanics, it may limit the ability of DENSE to quantify finer details such as transmural strains (subendocardial, midmyocardial and subepicardial) and right ventricular mechanics. We hypothesized that it is possible to efficiently increase the resolution of DENSE by af actor of 4u tilizing an avigator feedback system.

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Andrew J. Powell

Boston Children's Hospital

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