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Dive into the research topics where Pierre Bour is active.

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Featured researches published by Pierre Bour.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2017

Real‐time monitoring of tissue displacement and temperature changes during MR‐guided high intensity focused ultrasound

Pierre Bour; Fabrice Marquet; Valéry Ozenne; Solenn Toupin; Erik Dumont; Jean-François Aubry; Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffé; B. Quesson

The therapy endpoint most commonly used in MR‐guided high intensity focused ultrasound is the thermal dose. Although namely correlated with nonviable tissue, it does not account for changes in mechanical properties of tissue during ablation. This study presents a new acquisition sequence for multislice, subsecond and simultaneous imaging of tissue temperature and displacement during ablation.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2017

Improved cardiac magnetic resonance thermometry and dosimetry for monitoring lesion formation during catheter ablation

Valéry Ozenne; Solenn Toupin; Pierre Bour; Baudouin Denis de Senneville; Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffé; Manuel Boissenin; Jenny Benois-Pineau; Michael S. Hansen; Souheil J. Inati; Assaf Govari; Pierre Jaïs; Bruno Quesson

A new real‐time MR‐thermometry pipeline was developed to measure multiple temperature images per heartbeat with 1.6×1.6×3 mm3 spatial resolution. The method was evaluated on 10 healthy volunteers and during radiofrequency ablation (RFA) in sheep.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Non-invasive cardiac pacing with image-guided focused ultrasound

Fabrice Marquet; Pierre Bour; Fanny Vaillant; Sana Amraoui; Rémi Dubois; Philippe Ritter; Michel Haïssaguerre; Mélèze Hocini; Olivier Bernus; Bruno Quesson

Currently, no non-invasive cardiac pacing device acceptable for prolonged use in conscious patients exists. High Intensity Focused Ultrasound (HIFU) can be used to perform remote pacing using reversibility of electromechanical coupling of cardiomyocytes. Here we described an extracorporeal cardiac stimulation device and study its efficacy and safety. We conducted experiments ex vivo and in vivo in a large animal model (pig) to evaluate clinical potential of such a technique. The stimulation threshold was determined in 10 different ex vivo hearts and different clinically relevant electrical effects such as consecutive stimulations of different heart chambers with a single ultrasonic probe, continuous pacing or the inducibility of ventricular tachycardia were shown. Using ultrasonic contrast agent, consistent cardiac stimulation was achievable in vivo for up to 1 hour sessions in 4 different animals. No damage was observed in inversion-recovery MR sequences performed in vivo in the 4 animals. Histological analysis revealed no differences between stimulated and control regions, for all ex vivo and in vivo cases.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2016

Magnetic resonance-compatible model of isolated working heart from large animal for multimodal assessment of cardiac function, electrophysiology and metabolism

Fanny Vaillant; Pierre Bour; Jérôme Naulin; David Benoist; Virginie Loyer; Delphine Vieillot; Louis Labrousse; Philippe Ritter; Olivier Bernus; Pierre Dos Santos; Bruno Quesson

To provide a model close to the human heart, and to study intrinsic cardiac function at the same time as electromechanical coupling, we developed a magnetic resonance (MR)-compatible setup of isolated working perfused pig hearts. Hearts from pigs (40 kg, n = 20) and sheep (n = 1) were blood perfused ex vivo in the working mode with and without loaded right ventricle (RV), for 80 min. Cardiac function was assessed by measuring left intraventricular pressure and left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (LVEF), aortic and mitral valve dynamics, and native T1 mapping with MR imaging (1.5 Tesla). Potential myocardial alterations were assessed at the end of ex vivo perfusion from late-Gadolinium enhancement T1 mapping. The ex vivo cardiac function was stable across the 80 min of perfusion. Aortic flow and LV-dP/dtmin were significantly higher (P < 0.05) in hearts perfused with loaded RV, without differences for heart rate, maximal and minimal LV pressure, LV-dP/dtmax, LVEF, and kinetics of aortic and mitral valves. T1 mapping analysis showed a spatially homogeneous distribution over the LV. Simultaneous recording of hemodynamics, LVEF, and local cardiac electrophysiological signals were then successfully performed at baseline and during electrical pacing protocols without inducing alteration of MR images. Finally, (31)P nuclear MR spectroscopy (9.4 T) was also performed in two pig hearts, showing phosphocreatine-to-ATP ratio in accordance with data previously reported in vivo. We demonstrate the feasibility to perfuse isolated pig hearts in the working mode, inside an MR environment, allowing simultaneous assessment of cardiac structure, mechanics, and electrophysiology, illustrating examples of potential applications.


Ultrasound in Medicine and Biology | 2018

Myocardial Thermal Ablation with a Transesophageal High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Probe: Experiments on Beating Heart Models

Paul Greillier; Bénédicte Ankou; Pierre Bour; Ali Zorgani; Emma Abell; Romain Lacoste; Francis Bessière; Mathieu Pernot; Stefan Catheline; Bruno Quesson; Philippe Chevalier; Cyril Lafon

Described here is a study of transesophageal thermal ablation of isolated and perfused beating hearts and non-human primates. An endoscope integrating a transesophageal echocardiography probe and a high-intensity focused ultrasound transducer was built and tested on five Langendorff-isolated hearts and three 30-kg baboons. B-Mode ultrasound, passive elastography and magnetic resonance imaging were performed to monitor thermal lesions. In isolated hearts, continuous and gated sonication parameters were evaluated with acoustic intensities of 9-12 W/cm2. Sonication parameters of gated exposures with 12 W/cm2 acoustic intensity for 5 min consistently produced visible lesions in the ventricles of isolated hearts. In animals, left atria and ventricles were exposed to repeated continuous sonications (4-15 times for 16 s) at an acoustic intensity at the surface of the transducer of 9 W/cm2. Clinical states of the baboons during and after the treatment were good. One suspected lesion in the left ventricle could be evidenced by elastography, but was not confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging. The transesophageal procedure therefore has the potential to create thermal lesions in beating hearts and its safety in clinical practice seems promising. However, further technical exploration of the energy deposition in the target would be necessary before the next pre-clinical experiments.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2018

MR-ARFI-based method for the quantitative measurement of tissue elasticity: application for monitoring HIFU therapy

Jonathan Vappou; Pierre Bour; Fabrice Marquet; Valéry Ozenne; Bruno Quesson

Monitoring thermal therapies through medical imaging is essential in order to ensure that they are safe, efficient and reliable. In this paper, we propose a new approach, halfway between MR acoustic radiation force imaging (MR-ARFI) and MR elastography (MRE), allowing for the quantitative measurement of the elastic modulus of tissue in a highly localized manner. It relies on the simulation of the MR-ARFI profile, which depends on tissue biomechanical properties, and on the identification of tissue elasticity through the fitting of experimental displacement images measured using rapid MR-ARFI. This method was specifically developed to monitor MR-guided high intensity focused ultrasound (MRgHIFU) therapy. Elasticity changes were followed during HIFU ablations (N  =  6) performed ex vivo in porcine muscle samples, and were compared to temperature changes measured by MR-thermometry. Shear modulus was found to increase consistently and steadily a few seconds after the heating started, and such changes were found to be irreversible. The shear modulus was found to increase from 1.49  ±  0.48 kPa (before ablation) to 3.69  ±  0.93 kPa (after ablation and cooling). Thanks to its ability to perform quantitative elasticity measurements in a highly localized manner around the focal spot, this method proved to be particularly attractive for monitoring HIFU ablations.


International Journal of Hyperthermia | 2018

Real-time 3D ultrasound based motion tracking for the treatment of mobile organs with MR-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound

Pierre Bour; Valéry Ozenne; Fabrice Marquet; Baudouin Denis de Senneville; Erik Dumont; B. Quesson

Abstract Introduction: Magnetic resonance-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound (MRgHIFU) treatments of mobile organs require locking the HIFU beam on the targeted tissue to maximise heating efficiency. We propose to use a standalone 3 D ultrasound (US)-based motion correction technique using the HIFU transducer in pulse-echo mode. Validation of the method was performed in vitro and in vivo in the liver of pig under MR-thermometry. Methods: 3 D-motion estimation was implemented using ultrasonic speckle-tracking between consecutive acquisitions. Displacement was estimated along four sub-apertures of the HIFU transducer by computing the normalised cross-correlation of backscattered signals followed by a triangulation algorithm. The HIFU beam was steered accordingly and energy was delivered under real-time MR-thermometry (using the proton resonance frequency shift method with online motion compensation and correction of associated susceptibility artefacts). An MR-navigator echo was used to assess the quality of the US-based motion correction. Results: Displacement estimations from US measurements were in good agreement with 1 D MR-navigator echo readings. In vitro, the maximum temperature increase was improved by 37% as compared to experiments performed without motion correction and temperature distribution remained much more focussed. Similar results were reported in vivo, with an increase of 35% on the maximum temperature using this US-based HIFU target locking. Conclusion: This standalone 3D US-based motion correction technique is robust and allows maintaining the HIFU focal spot in the presence of motion without adding any burden or complexity to MR thermal imaging. In vitro and in vivo results showed about 35% improvement in heating efficiency when focus position was locked on the target using the proposed technique.


Irbm | 2015

Magnetic Resonance Imaging guided cardiac radiofrequency ablation

Valéry Ozenne; S. Toupin; Pierre Bour; A. Emilien; F. Vaillant; B.D. de Senneville; Pierre Jaïs; Erik Dumont; Jenny Benois-Pineau; Pascal Desbarats; Bruno Quesson


International Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2016

First clinical evaluation of real-time cardiac MR thermometry

Valéry Ozenne; Solenne Toupin; Pierre Bour; Baudouin Denis de Senneville; Alexis Vaussy; Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffé; Pierre Jais; Hubert Cochet; Bruno Quesson


International Society of Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2016

In-vivo echo-navigated MR thermometry for real-time monitoring of cardiac radiofrequency ablation

Solenne Toupin; Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffé; Pierre Bour; Valéry Ozenne; Baudouin Denis de Senneville; Rainer Schneider; K. Jenkins; Arnaud Chaumeil; Pierre Jais; Bruno Quesson

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Erik Dumont

Unitec Institute of Technology

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Matthieu Lepetit-Coiffé

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fanny Vaillant

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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