Derivation of the distensibility coefficient using tissue Doppler as a marker of arterial function

2008 ◽  
Vol 114 (6) ◽  
pp. 441-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian A. Haluska ◽  
Leanne Jeffriess ◽  
Joseph Brown ◽  
Melodie Downey ◽  
Stephane G. Carlier ◽  
...  

To date, the main cardiovascular application of TDI (tissue Doppler imaging) has been in myocardial evaluation. In the present study, we investigated the feasibility and reproducibility of assessing arterial elasticity using the DC (distensibility coefficient) measured by TDI, the correlation of this with the DC obtained by other methods and the DC in patients with various degrees of cardiovascular risk. We studied 450 subjects (256 men; age, 51±10 years) with and without risk factors of cardiovascular disease. Arterial displacement was measured from TDI, and B-mode and M-mode images of the common carotid artery in the longitudinal plane, and the DC with each method was compared. Linear regression showed a good correlation between all three methods. The results for TDI and B-mode were comparable [(21±10) compared with (21±10)×10−3/kPa respectively; P=not significant], but there were significant differences between TDI and M-mode [(21±10) compared with (31±13)×10−3/kPa respectively; P<0.0001] and between B-mode and M-mode [(21±10) compared with (31±13)×10−3/kPa respectively; P<0.0001]. Similarly, Bland–Altman analysis showed the least variability in the DC between TDI and B-mode, and there were no significant differences between the average measurements. The TDI DC also had the lowest paired difference for inter-observer variability [(−0.1±1.1)×10−3/kPa; P=not significant]. In conclusion, the results of the present study suggest that TDI of the carotid arteries is feasible, comparable with B-mode measurements, more robust than M-mode and less variable than the other methods.

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (17) ◽  
pp. 3970
Author(s):  
Ruben Evertz ◽  
Sebastian Hub ◽  
Sören J. Backhaus ◽  
Torben Lange ◽  
Karl Toischer ◽  
...  

Aortic valve calcification (AVC) in aortic stenosis patients has diagnostic and prognostic implications. Little is known about the interchangeability of AVC obtained from different multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) software solutions. Contrast-enhanced MDCT data sets of 50 randomly selected aortic stenosis patients were analysed using three different software vendors (3Mensio, CVI42, Syngo.Via). A subset of 10 patients were analysed twice for the estimation of intra-observer variability. Intra- and inter-observer variability were determined using the ICC reliability method, Bland-Altman analysis and coefficients of variation. No differences were revealed between the software solutions in the AVC calculations (3Mensio 941 ± 623, Syngo.Via 948 mm3 ± 655, CVI42 941 ± 637; p = 0.455). The best inter-vendor agreement was found between the CVI42 and the Syngo.Via (ICC 0.997 (CI 0.995–0.998)), followed by the 3Mensio and the CVI42 (ICC 0.996 (CI 0.922–0.998)), and the 3Mensio and the Syngo.Via (ICC 0.992 (CI 0.986–0.995)). There was excellent intra- (3Mensio: ICC 0.999 (0.995–1.000); CVI42: ICC 1.000 (0.999–1.000); Syngo.Via: ICC 0.998 (0.993–1.000)) and inter-observer variability (3Mensio: ICC 1.000 (0.999–1.000); CVI42: ICC 1.000 (1.000–1.000); Syngo.Via: ICC 0.996 (0.985–0.999)) for all software types. Contrast-enhanced MDCT-derived AVC scores are interchangeable between and reproducible within different commercially available software solutions. This is important since sufficient reproducibility, interchangeability and valid results represent prerequisites for accurate TAVR planning and its widespread clinical use.


2008 ◽  
Vol 68 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
R Schmitz ◽  
J Heinig ◽  
SD Schäfer ◽  
W Klockenbusch ◽  
L Kiesel ◽  
...  

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