Tomography (Jul 2024)

Hyperpolarized Water for Coronary Artery Angiography and Whole-Heart Myocardial Perfusion Quantification

  • Yupeng Zhao,
  • Mathilde Hauge Lerche,
  • Magnus Karlsson,
  • Rie Beck Olin,
  • Esben Søvsø Szocska Hansen,
  • Malene Aastrup,
  • Mohsen Redda,
  • Christoffer Laustsen,
  • Lars G. Hanson,
  • Jan Henrik Ardenkjær-Larsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tomography10070084
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
pp. 1113 – 1122

Abstract

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Purpose: Water freely diffuses across cell membranes, making it suitable for measuring absolute tissue perfusion. In this study, we introduce an imaging method for conducting coronary artery angiography and quantifying myocardial perfusion across the entire heart using hyperpolarized water. Methods: 1H was hyperpolarized using dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (dDNP) with UV-generated radicals. Submillimeter resolution coronary artery images were acquired as 2D projections using a spoiled GRE (SPGRE) sequence gated on diastole. Dynamic perfusion images were obtained with a multi-slice SPGRE with diastole gating, covering the entire heart. Perfusion values were analyzed through histograms, and the most frequent estimated perfusion value (the mode of the distribution), was compared with the average values for 15O water PET from the literature. Results: A liquid state polarization of 10% at the time of the injection and a 30 s T1 in D2O TRIS buffer were measured. Both coronary artery and dynamic perfusion images exhibited good quality. The main and small coronary artery branches were well resolved. The most frequent estimated perfusion value is around 0.6 mL/g/min, which is lower than the average values obtained from the literature for 15O-water PET (around 1.1 and 1.5 mL/g/min). Conclusions: The study successfully demonstrated the feasibility of achieving high-resolution, motion-free coronary artery angiography and 3D whole-heart quantitative myocardial perfusion using hyperpolarized water.

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