Fetal blood flow velocimetry by phase-contrast MRI using a new triggering method and comparison with Doppler ultrasound in a sheep model: a pilot study

Object We present the first study demonstrating the feasibility of antenatal blood flow velocimetry performing ECG triggered phase-contrast (PC)-MRI in the fetal aorta by using a newly developed Doppler ultrasound trigger. Materials and methods Five pregnant sheep carrying singleton fetuses (gestati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Magma (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2014-06, Vol.27 (3), p.237-244
Hauptverfasser: Schoennagel, Bjoern P., Remus, Chressen C., Yamamura, Jin, Kording, Fabian, de Sousa, Manuela Tavares, Hecher, Kurt, Fischer, Roland, Ueberle, Friedrich, Boehme, Matthias, Adam, Gerhard, Kooijman, Hendrik, Wedegaertner, Ulrike
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Object We present the first study demonstrating the feasibility of antenatal blood flow velocimetry performing ECG triggered phase-contrast (PC)-MRI in the fetal aorta by using a newly developed Doppler ultrasound trigger. Materials and methods Five pregnant sheep carrying singleton fetuses (gestational age 121 days) were anesthetized to undergo fetal 2D PC-MRI in the fetal descending aorta (1.5 T) using a newly developed MR-compatible Doppler ultrasound trigger for fetal cardiac triggering. Inter-operator variability was assessed for PC-MR measurements and reproducibility was tested by repeated scans in one fetus. Inter-modality comparison was performed by Doppler ultrasound velocimetry. Results Fetal cardiac triggering was possible in all examinations. PC-MR velocimetry revealed a mean inter-operator variability of 3 ± 5 %. Average peak systolic flow velocities of 62.5 ± 4.4 cm/s were in good agreement with Doppler ultrasound measurements of 62.0 ± 9.2 cm/s ( p (Lord’s U test) ≫ 0.05). Conclusion Fetal PC-MR velocimetry was successfully performed using the newly developed MR-compatible Doppler ultrasound trigger for intrauterine fetal cardiac triggering, demonstrating high inter-operator and inter-modality agreement. This new method has the high potential for alternative assessment of hemodynamic decompensation of the fetal circulation.
ISSN:0968-5243
1352-8661
DOI:10.1007/s10334-013-0397-0