Abstract
Background. This study proposes and validates a method of measuring 3D strain in myocardium using a 3D Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (CMR) tissue-tagging sequence and a 3D optical flow method (OFM). Methods. Initially, a 3D tag MR sequence was developed and the parameters of the sequence and 3D OFM were optimized using phantom images with simulated deformation. This method then was validated in-vivo and utilized to quantify normal sheep left ventricular functions. Results. Optimizing imaging and OFM parameters in the phantom study produced sub-pixel root-mean square error (RMS) between the estimated and known displacements in the x (RMSx= 0.62 pixels (0.43 mm)), y (RMSy = 0.64 pixels (0.45 mm)) and z (RMSz = 0.68 pixels (1 mm)) direction, respectively. In-vivo validation demonstrated excellent correlation between the displacement measured by manually tracking tag intersections and that generated by 3D OFM (R 0.98). Technique performance was maintained even with 20% Gaussian noise added to the phantom images. Furthermore, 3D tracking of 3D cardiac motions resulted in a 51% decrease in in-plane tracking error as compared to 2D tracking. The in-vivo function studies showed that maximum wall thickening was greatest in the lateral wall, and increased from both apex and base towards the mid-ventricular region. Regional deformation patterns are in agreement with previous studies on LV function. Conclusion. A novel method was developed to measure 3D LV wall deformation rapidly with high in-plane and through-plane resolution from one 3D cine acquisition. © 2010 Xu et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Xu, C., Pilla, J., Isaac, G., Gorman, J., Blom, A., Gorman, R., … Dougherty, L. (2010). Deformation analysis of 3D tagged cardiac images using an optical flow method. Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-12-19
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