Abstract

BackgroundCardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can through the two methods 3D FLASH and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) give complementary information on the local orientations of cardiomyocytes and their laminar arrays.MethodsEight explanted rat hearts were perfused with Gd-DTPA contrast agent and fixative and imaged in a 9.4T magnet by two types of acquisition: 3D fast low angle shot (FLASH) imaging, voxels 50 × 50 × 50 μm, and 3D spin echo DTI with monopolar diffusion gradients of 3.6 ms duration at 11.5 ms separation, voxels 200 × 200 × 200 μm. The sensitivity of each approach to imaging parameters was explored.ResultsThe FLASH data showed laminar alignments of voxels with high signal, in keeping with the presumed predominance of contrast in the interstices between sheetlets. It was analysed, using structure-tensor (ST) analysis, to determine the most (v1ST), intermediate (v2ST) and least (v3ST) extended orthogonal directions of signal continuity. The DTI data was analysed to determine the most (e1DTI), intermediate (e2DTI) and least (e3DTI) orthogonal eigenvectors of extent of diffusion. The correspondence between the FLASH and DTI methods was measured and appraised. The most extended direction of FLASH signal (v1ST) agreed well with that of diffusion (e1DTI) throughout the left ventricle (representative discrepancy in the septum of 13.3 ± 6.7°: median ± absolute deviation) and both were in keeping with the expected local orientations of the long-axis of cardiomyocytes. However, the orientation of the least directions of FLASH signal continuity (v3ST) and diffusion (e3ST) showed greater discrepancies of up to 27.9 ± 17.4°. Both FLASH (v3ST) and DTI (e3DTI) where compared to directly measured laminar arrays in the FLASH images. For FLASH the discrepancy between the structure-tensor calculated v3ST and the directly measured FLASH laminar array normal was of 9 ± 7° for the lateral wall and 7 ± 9° for the septum (median ± inter quartile range), and for DTI the discrepancy between the calculated v3DTI and the directly measured FLASH laminar array normal was 22 ± 14° and 61 ± 53.4°. DTI was relatively insensitive to the number of diffusion directions and to time up to 72 hours post fixation, but was moderately affected by b-value (which was scaled by modifying diffusion gradient pulse strength with fixed gradient pulse separation). Optimal DTI parameters were b = 1000 mm/s2 and 12 diffusion directions. FLASH acquisitions were relatively insensitive to the image processing parameters explored.ConclusionsWe show that ST analysis of FLASH is a useful and accurate tool in the measurement of cardiac microstructure. While both FLASH and the DTI approaches appear promising for mapping of the alignments of myocytes throughout myocardium, marked discrepancies between the cross myocyte anisotropies deduced from each method call for consideration of their respective limitations.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12968-015-0129-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can through the two methods 3D fast low angle shot (FLASH) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) give complementary information on the local orientations of cardiomyocytes and their laminar arrays

  • In fixed myocardium ST is a better measure of myolaminar orientation than DTI over the parameter ranges explored

  • The reliability of DTI sheetlet orientation measurement compared to directly measured sheetlets was low or markedly low depending on cardiac location and we showed that poor DTI performance over this parameter range could be a consequence of poor laminar eigenvector assignment

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) can through the two methods 3D FLASH and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) give complementary information on the local orientations of cardiomyocytes and their laminar arrays. To the understanding of myocardial structure and function, it has been demonstrated in a series of studies that three principal orthogonal structural directions are present. These directions are: (i) along the local myocyte axis (m); (ii) perpendicular to the local myocyte axis in the sheetlet plane (s); and (iii) normal to the sheetlet plane (n) - a structural arrangement known as orthotropy [2,3,4,5,6,7]. Within the myocardium there are regions of abrupt change in laminar orientation, such that the myolaminae have been described as belonging to two populations (reviewed previously [8])

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