Title :
In Vivo Validation of Longitudinal–Circumferential Area Change Ratio to Estimate Myofiber Shortening in the Heart
Author :
Ashikaga, Hiroshi ; Omens, Jeffrey H.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Med., Div. of Cardiology, Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD, USA
fDate :
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The aim of this paper was to validate area change ratio (%AC) against myofiber shortening (%λf) in the heart in vivo. %AC is emerging as a mechanical index that may approximate %λf by incorporating both circumferential and longitudinal shortening. However, the physiological significance of %AC remains unclear. We studied the time course of %AC in the anterior midleft ventricular wall of normal canine heart in vivo (n = 14) during atrial pacing over the entire cardiac cycle using transmurally implanted markers and biplane cineradiography (8 ms/frame). %AC was calculated as the myocardial area change relative to the elemental material area on the circumferential-longitudinal plane at the reference configuration (=end diastole). %AC was compared with % λf that was determined from the transmural fiber orientation directly measured in the heart tissue. The time course of both %AC and %λf was determined in the subepicardial, midwall, and subendocardial layers. The time course of %AC and %λf was significantly different, and the difference was more pronounced towards the endocardium. %AC consistently overestimated %λf. The timing of the peak %AC was significantly delayed compared to that of the peak %λf. We conclude that %AC is significantly different from %λf both in magnitude and timing in vivo. %AC overestimates %λf, and the overestimation is worse toward the endocardial layers. This may be a potentially important limitation when applying %AC to optimization and responder identification for cardiac resynchronization therapy.
Keywords :
biomechanics; biomedical imaging; biomedical measurement; cardiology; muscle; anterior midleft ventricular wall; atrial pacing; biomechanics; biplane cineradiography; canine heart; cardiac cycle; cardiac resynchronization therapy; endocardium; heart tissue; in vivo validation; longitudinal-circumferential area change ratio; mechanical index; midwall layer; myocardial area change; myofiber shortening; physiological significance; subendocardial layer; subepicardial layer; transmural fiber orientation; transmurally implanted markers; Animals; Heart; In vivo; Indexes; Myocardium; Strain; Timing; Biomechanics; biomedical imaging; strain; Animals; Biomechanics; Cineradiography; Diagnostic Imaging; Dogs; Electrocardiography; Fiducial Markers; Heart; Myocardium; Myofibrils; Reproducibility of Results;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2012.2188101