Department of Cardiology, West-German Heart Center Essen, University Hospital Essen, University Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstrasse 55, 45122 Essen, Germany.
J Cardiovasc Magn Reson. 2010 Oct 13;12(1):58. doi: 10.1186/1532-429X-12-58.
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) is considered an attractive alternative for guiding transarterial aortic valve implantation (TAVI) featuring unlimited scan plane orientation and unsurpassed soft-tissue contrast with simultaneous device visualization. We sought to evaluate the CMR characteristics of both currently commercially available transcatheter heart valves (Edwards SAPIEN™, Medtronic CoreValve®) including their dedicated delivery devices and of a custom-built, CMR-compatible delivery device for the Medtronic CoreValve® prosthesis as an initial step towards real-time CMR-guided TAVI.
The devices were systematically examined in phantom models on a 1.5-Tesla scanner using high-resolution T1-weighted 3D FLASH, real-time TrueFISP and flow-sensitive phase-contrast sequences. Images were analyzed for device visualization quality, device-related susceptibility artifacts, and radiofrequency signal shielding.
CMR revealed major susceptibility artifacts for the two commercial delivery devices caused by considerable metal braiding and precluding in vivo application. The stainless steel-based Edwards SAPIEN™ prosthesis was also regarded not suitable for CMR-guided TAVI due to susceptibility artifacts exceeding the valve's dimensions and hindering an exact placement. In contrast, the nitinol-based Medtronic CoreValve® prosthesis was excellently visualized with delineation even of small details and, thus, regarded suitable for CMR-guided TAVI, particularly since reengineering of its delivery device toward CMR-compatibility resulted in artifact elimination and excellent visualization during catheter movement and valve deployment on real-time TrueFISP imaging. Reliable flow measurements could be performed for both stent-valves after deployment using phase-contrast sequences.
The present study shows that the Medtronic CoreValve® prosthesis is potentially suited for real-time CMR-guided placement in vivo after suggested design modifications of the delivery system.
心血管磁共振(CMR)被认为是一种有吸引力的替代方法,可用于指导经导管主动脉瓣植入术(TAVI),具有无限的扫描平面方向和无与伦比的软组织对比,同时可进行设备可视化。我们旨在评估两种目前市售的经导管心脏瓣膜(爱德华兹 SAPIEN™、美敦力 CoreValve®)及其专用输送装置以及美敦力 CoreValve®假体的定制、CMR 兼容输送装置的 CMR 特征,作为实时 CMR 引导 TAVI 的初始步骤。
在 1.5T 扫描仪上使用高分辨率 T1 加权 3D FLASH、实时 TrueFISP 和流敏感相位对比序列,在体模模型中对设备进行系统检查。对设备可视化质量、与设备相关的磁化率伪影以及射频信号屏蔽进行图像分析。
CMR 显示两种商业输送装置存在严重的磁化率伪影,这是由于大量金属编织造成的,因此无法在体内应用。基于不锈钢的爱德华兹 SAPIEN™假体也因磁化率伪影超过瓣膜尺寸并阻碍精确放置而不适合 CMR 引导 TAVI。相比之下,基于镍钛诺的美敦力 CoreValve®假体的可视化效果极佳,甚至可以描绘出小细节,因此被认为适合 CMR 引导 TAVI,特别是由于其输送装置向 CMR 兼容性的重新设计消除了伪影,并在实时 TrueFISP 成像上导管移动和瓣膜展开时提供了出色的可视化效果。部署后,使用相位对比序列可以可靠地对两种支架瓣膜进行流量测量。
本研究表明,在建议对输送系统进行设计修改后,美敦力 CoreValve®假体具有潜在适合实时 CMR 引导体内放置的能力。