4.5 Article

Feature tracking measurement of dyssynchrony from cardiovascular magnetic resonance cine acquisitions: comparison with echocardiographic speckle tracking

Journal

Publisher

BIOMED CENTRAL LTD
DOI: 10.1186/1532-429X-15-95

Keywords

Strain; Dyssynchrony; Echocardiography; Cardiovascular magnetic resonance

Funding

  1. TomTec Corporation (Munich, Germany)
  2. University of Pittsburgh
  3. Swedish Heart Lung Foundation
  4. Sundsvall Hospital
  5. Karolinska Institute of Stockholm, Sweden

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Background: Analysis of left ventricular (LV) mechanical dyssynchrony may provide incremental prognostic information regarding cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) response in addition to QRS width alone. Our objective was to quantify LV dyssynchrony using feature tracking post processing of routine cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) cine acquisitions (FT-CMR) in comparison to speckle tracking echocardiography. Methods: We studied 72 consecutive patients who had both steady-state free precession CMR and echocardiography. Mid-LV short axis CMR cines were analyzed using FT-CMR software and compared with echocardiographic speckle tracking radial dyssynchrony (time difference between the anteroseptal and posterior wall peak strain). Results: Radial dyssynchrony analysis was possible by FT-CMR in all patients, and in 67 (93%) by echocardiography. Dyssynchrony by FT-CMR and speckle tracking showed limits of agreement of strain delays of +/- 84 ms. These were large (up to 100% or more) relative to the small mean delays measured in more synchronous patients, but acceptable (mainly <25%) in those with mean delays of >200 ms. Radial dyssynchrony was significantly greater in wide QRS patients than narrow QRS patients by both FT-CMR (radial strain delay 230 +/- 94 vs. 77 +/- 92* ms) and speckle tracking (radial strain delay 242 +/- 101 vs. 75 +/- 88* ms, all * p < 0.001). Conclusions: FT-CMR delivered measurements of radial dyssynchrony from CMR cine acquisitions which, at least for the patients with more marked dyssynchrony, showed reasonable agreement with those from speckle tracking echocardiography. The clinical usefulness of the method, for example in predicting prognosis in CRT patients, remains to be investigated.

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