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Standardized T2* map of normal human heart in vivo to correct T2* segmental artefacts

Authors :
Luigi Landini
Aurelio Maggio
Maria Filomena Santarelli
Massimo Midiri
Massimo Lombardi
Maria Eliana Lai
Daniele De Marchi
Barbara Scattini
Gian Luca Forni
Anna Ramazzotti
Vincenzo Positano
Alessia Pepe
Caterina Borgna-Pignatti
Positano V, Pepe A, Santarelli MF, Scattini B, De Marchi D, Ramazzotti A, Forni G, Borgna-Pignatti C, Lai ME, Midiri M, Maggio A, Lombardi M, Landini L
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

A segmental, multislice, multi-echo T2* MRI approach could be useful in heart iron-overloaded patients to account for heterogeneous iron distribution, demonstrated by histological studies. However, segmental T2* assessment in heart can be affected by the presence of geometrical and susceptibility artefacts, which can act on different segments in different ways. The aim of this study was to assess T2* value distribution in the left ventricle and to develop a correction procedure to compensate for artefactual variations in segmental analysis. MRI was performed in four groups of 22 subjects each: healthy subjects (I), controls (II) (thalassemia intermedia patients without iron overload), thalassemia major patients with mild (III) and heavy (IV) iron overload. Three short-axis views (basal, median, and apical) of the left ventricle were obtained and analyzed using custom-written, previously validated software. The myocardium was automatically segmented into a 16-segment standardized heart model, and the mean T2* value for each segment was calculated. Punctual distribution of T2* over the myocardium was assessed, and T2* inhomogeneity maps for the three slices were obtained. In group I, no significant variation in the mean T2* among slices was found. T2* showed a characteristic circumferential variation in all three slices. The effect of susceptibility differences induced by cardiac veins was evident, together with low-scale variations induced by geometrical artefacts. Using the mean segmental deviations as correction factors, an artefact correction map was developed and used to normalize segmental data. The correction procedure was validated on group II. Group IV showed no significant presence of segmental artefacts, confirming the hypothesis that susceptibility artefacts are additive in nature and become negligible for high levels of iron overload. Group III showed a greater variability with respect to normal subjects. The correction map failed to compensate for these variations if both additive and percentage-based corrections were applied. This may reinforce the hypothesis that true inhomogeneity in iron deposition exists. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd0147df15ffc78e75f376dda2962526