Vessel Wall Imaging (Non-Coronary)
Hall B Monday 14:00-16:00 Computer 36
14:00 3680. 3D Contrast-Enhanced Flow-Insensitive Peripheral Vessel Wall Imaging
Jingsi Xie1, Zhaoyang Fan1, Debiao Li1
1Departments of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United States
Develop a 3D contrast-enhanced flow-insensitive vessel wall imaging technique
14:30 3681. Quantitative Analysis of DCE-MRI to Identify and Characterize Plaque at Early Stages (AHA I-III)
Zhuoli Zhang1, Nicole Mascheri1, Jose Agraz1, Zhaoyang Fan1, Richard Tang1, Xiaoming Bi2, Peter Weale2, Debiao Li1
1Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, United States; 2Siemens Healthcare , Chicago, IL, United States
Atherosclerotic disease is thought to begin shortly after birth. Through the years, plaques grow slowly, with variable morphologic aspects and properties at different stages of development. The American Heart Association (AHA) has established criteria by which plaques are classified according to content and structure. It is important to differentiate young stable plaques with a low extracellular lipid content that are not dangerous (types I–III) from unstable more dangerous types (IV-Vc). However, the molecular mediators of atherosclerosis at type I-III are an area of great interest in basic science. Characterization of plaque using MRI at a very early stage is very important for understanding disease process, choosing appropriate prevention and treatment strategies. Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) may play an important role to identify and characterize plaque at type I-III.
15:00 3682. Contrast Kinetics of Gadolinium Uptake May Discriminate Stable from Vulnerable Atherosclerotic Plaque
Alkystis Phinikaridou1, Christopher Sucato1, Stephan Anderson2, James A. Hamilton1
1Physiology & Biophysics, Boston University, Boston, MA, United States; 2Radiology, Boston University, Boston, MA, United States
We used a rabbit model of controlled atherothrombosis to test whether in vivo MRI can distinguish between plaques that disrupt after pharmacological triggering (vulnerable) and those that do not (stable). We employed in vivo dynamic contrast enhanced MRI to study the contrast kinetics of gadolinium (Gd-DTPA) in a quantitative manner, which could help to understand the mechanism of gadolinium uptake and derive standardized criteria that could permit a differentiation of stable from vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques.
15:30 3683. Carotid Plaque Burden Measurement Using Ultrafast 3D Black-Blood MRI
Niranjan Balu1, Vasily Yarnykh1, Baocheng Chu1, Jinnan Wang2, Thomas Hatsukami1, Chun Yuan1
1University of Washington, Seattle, WA, United States; 2Philips Research North America
Black-blood MRI is an established tool for carotid atherosclerotic plaque burden measurement. Accuracy of measurement can be improved by moving to isotropic imaging but can be challenging for patient compliance due to long scan times. In this work plaque assessment by an ultrafast isotropic 3D black-blood sequence (3D-MERGE) covering the entire cervical carotid arteries within 2 minutes is validated on patients with significant carotid plaque. 3D-MERGE provides good blood suppression and comparable plaque burden measurements to existing MRI protocols. Thus it provides a promising new tool for fast and accurate plaque burden assessment in patients with atherosclerotic plaque.
Dostları ilə paylaş: |