Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging measures of three‐dimensional aortic morphology in healthy aging and hypertension

Automated segmentation of three‐dimensional (3D) aortic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) renders a possible retrospective selection of any location to perform quantification of aortic caliber perpendicular to its centerline and provides regional and global 3D biomarkers such as length, diameter, or...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of magnetic resonance imaging 2021-05, Vol.53 (5), p.1471-1483
Hauptverfasser: Dietenbeck, Thomas, Houriez‐‐Gombaud‐Saintonge, Sophia, Charpentier, Etienne, Gencer, Umit, Giron, Alain, Gallo, Antonio, Boussouar, Samia, Pasi, Nicoletta, Soulat, Gilles, Mousseaux, Elie, Redheuil, Alban, Kachenoura, Nadjia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Automated segmentation of three‐dimensional (3D) aortic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) renders a possible retrospective selection of any location to perform quantification of aortic caliber perpendicular to its centerline and provides regional and global 3D biomarkers such as length, diameter, or volume. However, normative age‐related values of such measures are still lacking. The aim of this study was to provide normal values for 3D aortic morphological measures and investigate their changes in aging and hypertension. This was a retrospective study, in which 119 healthy controls (HC: 48 ± 14 years, 61 men) and 82 hypertensive patients (HT: 60 ± 14 years, 43 men) were enrolled. 1.5 and 3 T/3D steady state free precession or spoiled gradient echo were used. Automated 3D aortic segmentation provided aortic length, diameter, volume for the ascending (AAo), and descending aorta (DAo), along with cross‐sectional diameters at three aortic landmarks. Age, sex, body surface area (BSA), smoking, and blood pressures were recorded. Both groups were divided into two subgroups (≤50 years, >50 years). Statistical tests performed were linear regression for age‐related normal values and confidence intervals, Wilcoxon rank sum test for differences between groups (HC or HT), and multivariate analysis to identify main determinants of aortic morphological changes. In HC, linear regression revealed an increase in the AAo (respectively DAo) length by 2.84 mm (7.78 mm), maximal diameter by 1.36 mm (1.29 mm), and volume by 4.28 ml (8.71 ml) per decade. AAo morphological measures were higher in HT patients than in HC both ≤50 years but did not reach statistical significance (length: +2 mm, p = 0.531; diameter: +1.4 mm, p = 0.2936; volume:+6.8 ml, p = 0.1857). However, length (+6 mm, p = 0.003), maximal diameter (+4 mm, p 
ISSN:1053-1807
1522-2586
DOI:10.1002/jmri.27502