Abstract

Abstract Aims To improve image quality (IQ) in echocardiography an aberration correction (AC) algorithm has recently been implemented in commercial scanners. We aimed to study 1) correlation of a subjective IQ-score and an objective IQ-metric (global image coherence (GIC)), 2) if AC improved IQ; 3) if AC affected average values and interobserver agreement of left ventricular (LV) size, LV longitudinal strain, and left atrial (LA) volume. Methods and results From 50 adult patients, whereof 45 (90%) had cardiovascular disease, unprocessed image data (channel data) were acquired from six standard transthoracic views. The data were processed with and without AC, resulting in 300 pairs of cine-loops. The cine-loops were randomly presented one-by-one to two blinded raters experienced in echocardiography. Both raters scored IQ subjectively from 1 (poor) to 4 (very good) and quantified LV dimensions, volumes and longitudinal strain, and LA volume.IQ-score correlated with GIC, Spearman rho 0.72, P <0.001. AC improved median IQ-score from 2.5 to 3.0 (Wilcoxon signed rank: P <0.001). The differences in average values of LV size, LV longitudinal strain or LA volume with and without AC were not statistically significant and numerically minimal. Measured by intraclass correlation, interobserver agreement of these values was not significantly affected by AC. Conclusion IQ-score strongly correlated with GIC. AC improved IQ. However, AC did not lead to statistically significant changes in average values or interobserver agreement of LV size, LV longitudinal strain or LA volume quantification. Likely, the major benefit from AC is enhanced visualization of anatomical details.

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