Abstract
Our aim was to assess the effects of 21-days head-down (-6 degrees) bed-rest (BR) and effectiveness of sledge jump countermeasure (CM), on aortic flow and morphology by Phase Contrast (PC) MRI. Male subjects were enrolled at :envihub (DLR, Germany) in control (CTRL, N=12) or countermeasure (CM, N=12) groups. PC-MRI images were obtained before and after 21-days of BR, and analyzed with custom software. Semi-automated region growing and thresholding were applied to segment the aortic lumen, and to compute parameters from velocity images: area lumen (AL), flow velocity, stroke volume (SV), flow rate (Qpeak), time-to-peak flow, systolic duration and heart beat duration (RR). After 21 days, in CTRL significant decreases in SV (14%), Qpeak (5%) and AL (4%) were observed compared to baseline values. Conversely, for CM no changes were observed in these parameters, but only in RR (-8%). Cardiac adaptation to deconditioning due to immobilization resulted in a reduction of SV and Qpeak that might have induced a remodeling process in the ascending aorta, by shrinking of its lumen. The applied CM seemed to counteract at least partially these effects.
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CITATION STYLE
Caiani, E. G., Riso, G., Landreani, F., Martin-Yebra, A., Pirola, S., Piatti, F., … Migeotte, P. F. (2016). Aortic flow and morphology adaptation to deconditioning after 21-days of head-down bed-rest assessed by phase contrast MRI. In Computing in Cardiology (Vol. 43, pp. 73–76). IEEE Computer Society. https://doi.org/10.22489/cinc.2016.023-440
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