High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.

Imaging techniques of the mitral valve have improved tremendously during the last decade, but challenges persist. The delicate changes in annulus shape and papillary muscle position throughout the cardiac cycle have significant impact on the stress distribution in the leaflets and chords, thus prese...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sam E Stephens, Serguei Liachenko, Neil B Ingels, Jonathan F Wenk, Morten O Jensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5576658?pdf=render
id doaj-0a47670fe3e349e98678a92050c15060
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0a47670fe3e349e98678a92050c150602020-11-24T22:05:31ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01128e018404210.1371/journal.pone.0184042High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.Sam E StephensSerguei LiachenkoNeil B IngelsJonathan F WenkMorten O JensenImaging techniques of the mitral valve have improved tremendously during the last decade, but challenges persist. The delicate changes in annulus shape and papillary muscle position throughout the cardiac cycle have significant impact on the stress distribution in the leaflets and chords, thus preservation of anatomically accurate positioning is critical. The aim of this study was to develop an in vitro method and apparatus for obtaining high-resolution 3D MRI images of porcine mitral valves in both the diastolic and systolic configurations with physiologically appropriate annular shape, papillary muscle positions and orientations, specific to the heart from which the valve was harvested. Positioning and mounting was achieved through novel, customized mounting hardware consisting of papillary muscle and annulus holders with geometries determined via pre-mortem ultrasonic intra-valve measurements. A semi-automatic process was developed and employed to tailor Computer Aided Design models of the holders used to mount the valve. All valve mounting hardware was 3D printed using a stereolithographic printer, and the material of all fasteners used were brass for MRI compatibility. The mounted valves were placed within a clear acrylic case, capable of holding a zero-pressure and pressurized liquid bath of a MRI-compatible fluid. Obtaining images from the valve submerged in liquid fluid mimics the natural environment surrounding the valve, avoiding artefacts due to tissue surface tension mismatch and gravitational impact on tissue shape when not neutrally buoyant. Fluid pressure was supplied by reservoirs held at differing elevations and monitored and controlled to within ±1mmHg to ensure that the valves remained steady. The valves were scanned in a 7 Tesla MRI system providing a voxel resolution of at least 80μm. The systematic approach produced 3D datasets of high quality which, when combined with physiologically accurate positioning by the apparatus, can serve as an important input for validated computational models.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5576658?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sam E Stephens
Serguei Liachenko
Neil B Ingels
Jonathan F Wenk
Morten O Jensen
spellingShingle Sam E Stephens
Serguei Liachenko
Neil B Ingels
Jonathan F Wenk
Morten O Jensen
High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sam E Stephens
Serguei Liachenko
Neil B Ingels
Jonathan F Wenk
Morten O Jensen
author_sort Sam E Stephens
title High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.
title_short High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.
title_full High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.
title_fullStr High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.
title_full_unstemmed High resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 Tesla MRI.
title_sort high resolution imaging of the mitral valve in the natural state with 7 tesla mri.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Imaging techniques of the mitral valve have improved tremendously during the last decade, but challenges persist. The delicate changes in annulus shape and papillary muscle position throughout the cardiac cycle have significant impact on the stress distribution in the leaflets and chords, thus preservation of anatomically accurate positioning is critical. The aim of this study was to develop an in vitro method and apparatus for obtaining high-resolution 3D MRI images of porcine mitral valves in both the diastolic and systolic configurations with physiologically appropriate annular shape, papillary muscle positions and orientations, specific to the heart from which the valve was harvested. Positioning and mounting was achieved through novel, customized mounting hardware consisting of papillary muscle and annulus holders with geometries determined via pre-mortem ultrasonic intra-valve measurements. A semi-automatic process was developed and employed to tailor Computer Aided Design models of the holders used to mount the valve. All valve mounting hardware was 3D printed using a stereolithographic printer, and the material of all fasteners used were brass for MRI compatibility. The mounted valves were placed within a clear acrylic case, capable of holding a zero-pressure and pressurized liquid bath of a MRI-compatible fluid. Obtaining images from the valve submerged in liquid fluid mimics the natural environment surrounding the valve, avoiding artefacts due to tissue surface tension mismatch and gravitational impact on tissue shape when not neutrally buoyant. Fluid pressure was supplied by reservoirs held at differing elevations and monitored and controlled to within ±1mmHg to ensure that the valves remained steady. The valves were scanned in a 7 Tesla MRI system providing a voxel resolution of at least 80μm. The systematic approach produced 3D datasets of high quality which, when combined with physiologically accurate positioning by the apparatus, can serve as an important input for validated computational models.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5576658?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT samestephens highresolutionimagingofthemitralvalveinthenaturalstatewith7teslamri
AT sergueiliachenko highresolutionimagingofthemitralvalveinthenaturalstatewith7teslamri
AT neilbingels highresolutionimagingofthemitralvalveinthenaturalstatewith7teslamri
AT jonathanfwenk highresolutionimagingofthemitralvalveinthenaturalstatewith7teslamri
AT mortenojensen highresolutionimagingofthemitralvalveinthenaturalstatewith7teslamri
_version_ 1725826075039105024