Feasibility of in vivo measurement of carotid wall shear rate using spiral Fourier velocity encoded MRI

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Abstract

Arterial wall shear stress is widely believed to influence the formation and growth of atherosclerotic plaque; however, there is currently no gold standard for its in vivo measurement. The use of phase contrast MRI has proved to be challenging due to partial-volume effects and inadequate signal-to-noise ratio at the high spatial resolutions that are required. This work evaluates the use of spiral Fourier velocity encoded MRI as a rapid method for assessing wall shear rate in the carotid arteries. Wall shear rate is calculated from velocity histograms in voxels spanning the blood/vessel wall interface, using a method developed by Frayne and Rutt (Magn Reson Med 1995;34:378-387). This study (i) demonstrates the accuracy of the velocity histograms measured by spiral Fourier velocity encoding in a pulsatile carotid flow phantom compared with high-resolution phase contrast, (ii) demonstrates the accuracy of Fourier velocity encoding-based shear rate measurements in a numerical phantom designed using a computational fluid dynamics simulation of carotid flow, and (iii) demonstrates in vivo measurement of regional wall shear rate and oscillatory shear index in the carotid arteries of healthy volunteers at 3 T. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Carvalho, J. L. A., Nielsen, J. F., & Nayak, K. S. (2010). Feasibility of in vivo measurement of carotid wall shear rate using spiral Fourier velocity encoded MRI. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 63(6), 1537–1547. https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.22325

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