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Journal ArticleDOI

Regional ventricular wall thickening reflects changes in cardiac fiber and sheet structure during contraction: quantification with diffusion tensor MRI.

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TLDR
It is shown for the first time that geometric changes in both sheet and fiber orientation provide a substantial mechanism for radial wall thickening independent of active components due to myofiber shortening.
Abstract
Dynamic changes of myocardial fiber and sheet structure are key determinants of regional ventricular function. However, quantitative characterization of the contraction-related changes in fiber and sheet structure has not been reported. The objective of this study was to quantify cardiac fiber and sheet structure at selected phases of the cardiac cycle. Diffusion tensor MRI was performed on isolated, perfused Sprague-Dawley rat hearts arrested or fixed in three states as follows: 1) potassium arrested (PA), which represents end diastole; 2) barium-induced contracture with volume (BV+), which represents isovolumic contraction or early systole; and 3) barium-induced contracture without volume (BV-), which represents end systole. Myocardial fiber orientations at the base, midventricle, and apex were determined from the primary eigenvectors of the diffusion tensor. Sheet structure was determined from the secondary and tertiary eigenvectors at the same locations. We observed that the transmural distribution of the myofiber helix angle remained unchanged as contraction proceeded from PA to BV+, but endocardial and epicardial fibers became more longitudinally orientated in the BV- group. Although sheet structure exhibited significant regional variations, changes in sheet structure during myocardial contraction were relatively uniform across regions. The magnitude of the sheet angle, which is an index of local sheet slope, decreased by 23 and 44% in BV+ and BV- groups, respectively, which suggests more radial orientation of the sheet. In summary, we have shown for the first time that geometric changes in both sheet and fiber orientation provide a substantial mechanism for radial wall thickening independent of active components due to myofiber shortening. Our results provide direct evidence that sheet reorientation is a primary determinant of myocardial wall thickening.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ensembles of engineered cardiac tissues for physiological and pharmacological study: Heart on a chip

TL;DR: The design of a "heart on a chip" that exploits muscular thin film technology--biohybrid constructs of an engineered, anisotropic ventricular myocardium on an elastomeric thin film--to measure contractility, combined with a quantification of action potential propagation, and cytoskeletal architecture in multiple tissues in the same experiment is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Left ventricular structure and function: basic science for cardiac imaging.

TL;DR: The myofiber geometry of the left ventricle (LV) changes gradually from a right-handed helix in the subendocardium to a left-handed one in subepicardium as mentioned in this paper, and the link between LV deformation and the intracavitary flow direction observed during each phase of the cardiac cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unlocking the Mysteries of Diastolic Function: Deciphering the Rosetta Stone 10 Years Later

TL;DR: Advances in echo-Doppler have helped to further decipher the morphologic and physiological expression of cardiovascular disease and unlock additional mysteries of diastology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Left Ventricular Form and Function Revisited : Applied Translational Science to Cardiovascular Ultrasound Imaging

TL;DR: The structure and function of the left ventricle is examined relative to the potential clinical application of DTI and speckle tracking in assessing the global mechanical sequence of theleft ventricular wall in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comprehensive Evaluation of Left Ventricular Strain Using Speckle Tracking Echocardiography in Normal Adults: Comparison of Three-Dimensional and Two-Dimensional Approaches

TL;DR: 3DT is a simple, feasible, and reproducible method to measure longitudinal, circumferential, and radial strains, and the discordant results between 3DT and 2DT may be explained by the 3D cardiac motion that has been ignored in current 2DT.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microstructural and physiological features of tissues elucidated by quantitative-diffusion-tensor MRI

TL;DR: Quantitative-diffusion-tensor MRI consists of deriving and displaying parameters that resemble histological or physiological stains, i.e., that characterize intrinsic features of tissue microstructure and microdynamics that are objective, and insensitive to the choice of laboratory coordinate system.
Book ChapterDOI

The Cardiovascular System

Journal ArticleDOI

Optimal strategies for measuring diffusion in anisotropic systems by magnetic resonance imaging.

TL;DR: An algorithm is presented that minimizes the bias inherent in making measurements with a fixed set of gradient vector directions by spreading out measurements in 3‐dimensional gradient vector space and this results in reduced scan times, increased precision, or improved resolution in diffusion tensor images.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fiber Orientation in the Canine Left Ventricle during Diastole and Systole

TL;DR: The wall has a well-ordered distribution of fiber angles varying from about 60° (from the circumferential direction) at the inner surface to about –60° on the outer surface, and the greatest change in angle occurs at the two surfaces (endocardial and epicardial).
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