Scientific Reports (May 2021)

Comparison of cine and real-time cardiac MRI in rhesus macaques

  • Amir Moussavi,
  • Sophie Mißbach,
  • Claudia Serrano Ferrel,
  • Hasti Ghasemipour,
  • Kristin Kötz,
  • Charis Drummer,
  • Rüdiger Behr,
  • Wolfram-Hubertus Zimmermann,
  • Susann Boretius

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-90106-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Cardiac MRI in rhesus macaques, a species of major relevance for preclinical studies on biological therapies, requires artificial ventilation to realize breath holding. To overcome this limitation of standard cine MRI, the feasibility of Real-Time (RT) cardiac MRI has been tested in a cohort of ten adult rhesus macaques using a clinical MR-system. In spite of lower tissue contrast and sharpness of RT-MRI, cardiac functions were similarly well assessed by RT-MRI compared to cine MRI (similar intra-subject repeatability). However, systematic underestimation of the end-diastolic volume (31 ± 9%), end-systolic volume (20 ± 11%), stroke volume (40 ± 12%) and ejection fraction (13 ± 9%) hamper the comparability of RT-MRI results with those of other cardiac MRI methods. Yet, the underestimations were very consistent (< 5% variability) for repetitive measurements, making RT-MRI an appropriate alternative to cine MRI for longitudinal studies. In addition, RT-MRI enabled the analysis of cardio-respiratory coupling. All functional parameters showed lower values during expiration compared to inspiration, most likely due to the pressure-controlled artificial ventilation. In conclusion, despite systematic underestimation of the functional parameters, RT-MRI allowed the assessment of left ventricular function in macaques with significantly less experimental effort, measurement time, risk and burden for the animals compared to cine MRI.