Abstract:
In patients with aortic stenosis, accurate assessment of severity with echocardiography
is central to surgical decision making. But, when image quality is poor
or equivocal results obtained, another robust non-invasive technique would be
invaluable. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) may be a useful alternative.
Phase contrast CMR can measure ow and velocity, therefore it is theoretically
possible to estimate the main determinant of severity aortic valve area, using the
continuity approach. However, it was found that the phase contrast estimate
of stroke volume, sampled in the stenotic jet, systematically underestimated left
ventricular stroke volume. This underestimation was greater with increasing
aortic stenosis severity.
Critical clinical treatment decisions depend on the ability to reliably differentiate
between patients with moderate and severe aortic stenosis. To achieve accurate
estimation of aortic valve areas the velocity and ow data obtained in these
turbulent, high velocity jets must be accurate.
In this thesis, non-stenotic and stenotic phantoms were designed and constructed
to experimentally interrogate the error. It was determined that signal loss, due
to intravoxel dephasing, decreased the reliability of the measured forward ow
jet velocities. Extreme signal loss in the jet eventuated in salt and pepper noise,
which, with a mean velocity of zero, resulted in the underestimation.
Intravoxel dephasing signal loss due to higher order motions, turbulence and spin
mixing could all be mitigated by reducing the duration of the velocity sensitivity
gradients and shortening the overall echo time (TE). However, improvements in
an optimised PC sequence (TE 1:5ms) were not satisfactory. Flow estimates
remained variable and were underestimated beyond the aortic valve.
To reduce the TE further, a new phase contrast pulse sequence based on an
ultrashort TE readout trajectory and velocity dependent slice excitation with
gradient inversion was designed and implemented. The new sequence's TE is
approximately 25% (0:65ms) of what is currently clinically available (TE 2:8ms).
Good agreement in the phantom was maintained up to very high ow rates with
improved signal characteristics shown in-vivo. This new phase contrast pulse
sequence is worthy of further investigation as an accurate evaluation of patients
with aortic stenosis.