Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (Jun 2017)

Hyperpolarized 13C urea myocardial first-pass perfusion imaging using velocity-selective excitation

  • Maximilian Fuetterer,
  • Julia Busch,
  • Sophie M. Peereboom,
  • Constantin von Deuster,
  • Lukas Wissmann,
  • Miriam Lipiski,
  • Thea Fleischmann,
  • Nikola Cesarovic,
  • Christian T. Stoeck,
  • Sebastian Kozerke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12968-017-0364-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background A velocity-selective binomial excitation scheme for myocardial first-pass perfusion measurements with hyperpolarized 13C substrates, which preserves bolus magnetization inside the blood pool, is presented. The proposed method is evaluated against gadolinium-enhanced 1H measurements in-vivo. Methods The proposed excitation with an echo-planar imaging readout was implemented on a clinical CMR system. Dynamic myocardial stress perfusion images were acquired in six healthy pigs after bolus injection of hyperpolarized 13C urea with the velocity-selective vs. conventional excitation, as well as standard 1H gadolinium-enhanced images. Signal-to-noise, contrast-to-noise (CNR) and homogeneity of semi-quantitative perfusion measures were compared between methods based on first-pass signal-intensity time curves extracted from a mid-ventricular slice. Diagnostic feasibility is demonstrated in a case of septal infarction. Results Velocity-selective excitation provides over three-fold reduction in blood pool signal with a two-fold increase in myocardial CNR. Extracted first-pass perfusion curves reveal a significantly reduced variability of semi-quantitative first-pass perfusion measures (12–20%) for velocity-selective excitation compared to conventional excitation (28–93%), comparable to that of reference 1H gadolinium data (9–15%). Overall image quality appears comparable between the velocity-selective hyperpolarized and gadolinium-enhanced imaging. Conclusion The feasibility of hyperpolarized 13C first-pass perfusion CMR has been demonstrated in swine. Comparison with reference 1H gadolinium data revealed sufficient data quality and indicates the potential of hyperpolarized perfusion imaging for human applications.

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