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- Title
Moving beyond size: vorticity and energy loss are correlated with right ventricular dysfunction and exercise intolerance in repaired Tetralogy of Fallot.
- Authors
Loke, Yue-Hin; Capuano, Francesco; Cleveland, Vincent; Mandell, Jason G.; Balaras, Elias; Olivieri, Laura J.
- Abstract
Background: The global effect of chronic pulmonary regurgitation (PR) on right ventricular (RV) dilation and dysfunction in repaired Tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF) patients is well studied by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). However, the links between PR in the RV outflow tract (RVOT), RV dysfunction and exercise intolerance are not clarified by conventional measurements. Not all patients with RV dilation share the same intracardiac flow characteristics, now measurable by time resolved three-dimensional phase contrast imaging (4D flow). In our study, we quantified regional vorticity and energy loss in rTOF patients and correlated these parameters with RV dysfunction and exercise capacity. Methods: rTOF patients with 4D flow datasets were retrospectively analyzed, including those with transannular/infundibular repair and conduit repair. Normal controls and RV dilation patients with atrial-level shunts (Qp:Qs > 1.2:1) were included for comparison. 4D flow was post-processed using IT Flow (Cardioflow, Japan). Systolic/diastolic vorticity (ω, 1/s) and viscous energy loss (VEL, mW) in the RVOT and RV inflow were measured. To characterize the relative influence of diastolic vorticity in the two regions, an RV Diastolic Vorticity Quotient (ωRVOT-Diastole/ωRV Inflow-Diastole, RV-DVQ) was calculated. Additionally, RVOT Vorticity Quotient (ωRVOT-Diastole/ωRVOT-Systole, RVOT-VQ) and RVOT Energy Quotient (VELRVOT-Diastole/VELRVOT-Systole, RVOT-EQ) was calculated. In rTOF, measurements were correlated against conventional CMR and exercise stress test results. Results: 58 rTOF patients, 28 RV dilation patients and 12 controls were included. RV-DVQ, RVOT-VQ, and RVOT-EQ were highest in rTOF patients with severe PR compared to rTOF patients with non-severe PR, RV dilation and controls (p < 0.001). RV-DVQ positively correlated with RV end-diastolic volume (0.683, p < 0.001), PR fraction (0.774, p < 0.001) and negatively with RV ejection fraction (− 0.521, p = 0.003). Both RVOT-VQ, RVOT-EQ negatively correlated with VO2-max (− 0.587, p = 0.008 and − 0.617, p = 0.005) and % predicted VO2-max (− 0.678, p = 0.016 and − 0.690, p = 0.001). Conclusions: In rTOF patients, vorticity and energy loss dominate the RVOT compared to tricuspid inflow, correlating with RV dysfunction and exercise intolerance. These 4D flow-based measurements may be sensitive biomarkers to guide surgical management of rTOF patients.
- Subjects
HEART valve diseases; EXERCISE tolerance; ACQUISITION of data methodology; THREE-dimensional imaging; VENTRICULAR ejection fraction; TETRALOGY of Fallot; RIGHT heart ventricle; OXYGEN consumption; RETROSPECTIVE studies; MAGNETIC resonance imaging; CARDIAC contraction; RIGHT ventricular dysfunction; MEDICAL records; HEMODYNAMICS; STATISTICAL correlation; DIASTOLE (Cardiac cycle); BLOOD flow measurement
- Publication
Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (BioMed Central), 2021, Vol 23, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1532-429X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/s12968-021-00789-2