• DocumentCode
    1326563
  • Title

    In Vivo Quantitative Mapping of Myocardial Stiffening and Transmural Anisotropy During the Cardiac Cycle

  • Author

    Couade, Mathieu ; Pernot, Mathieu ; Messas, Emmanuel ; Bel, Alain ; Ba, Maguette ; Hagège, Albert ; Fink, Mathias ; Tanter, Mickael

  • Author_Institution
    Supersonic Imagine, Aix-en-Provence, France
  • Volume
    30
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    295
  • Lastpage
    305
  • Abstract
    Shear wave imaging was evaluated for the in vivo assessment of myocardial biomechanical properties on ten open chest sheep. The use of dedicated ultrasonic sequences implemented on a very high frame rate ultrasonic scanner (>; 5000 frames per second) enables the estimation of the quantitative shear modulus of myocardium several times during one cardiac cycle. A 128 element probe remotely generates a shear wave thanks to the radiation force induced by a focused ultrasonic burst. The resulting shear wave propagation is tracked using the same probe by cross-correlating successive ultrasonic images acquired at a very high frame rate. The shear wave speed estimated at each location in the ultrasonic image gives access to the local myocardial stiffness (shear modulus μ). The technique was found to be reproducible (standard deviation <; 3%) and able to estimate both systolic and diastolic stiffness on each sheep (respectively μdias ≈ 2 kPa and μsyst ≈ 30 kPa). Moreover, the ability of the proposed method to polarize the shear wave generation and propagation along a chosen axis permits the study the local elastic anisotropy of myocardial muscle. As expected, myocardial elastic anisotropy is found to vary with muscle depth. The real time capabilities and potential of Shear Wave Imaging using ultrafast scanners for cardiac applications is finally illustrated by studying the dynamics of this fractional anisotropy during the cardiac cycle.
  • Keywords
    biomechanics; biomedical ultrasonics; cardiology; elastic waves; elasticity; muscle; shear modulus; cardiac applications; cardiac cycle; diastolic stiffness; focused ultrasonic burst; local elastic anisotropy; local myocardial stiffness; muscle depth; myocardial biomechanical property; myocardial elastic anisotropy; myocardial muscle; myocardial stiffening in vivo quantitative mapping; myocardium shear modulus; radiation force; shear wave generation; shear wave imaging; shear wave propagation; sheep; systolic stiffness; transmural anisotropy; ultrafast scanners; ultrasonic images; ultrasonic scanner; ultrasonic sequences; Acoustics; Elasticity; Heart; Imaging; In vivo; Myocardium; Ultrasonic imaging; Cardiac imaging; elastography; shear wave; ultrasound; Algorithms; Animals; Anisotropy; Echocardiography; Elastic Modulus; Heart; Heart Ventricles; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Reproducibility of Results; Sheep; Systole; Ventricular Function;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0278-0062
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMI.2010.2076829
  • Filename
    5575428