PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Image-derived mean velocity measurement for prediction of coronary flow reserve in a canonical stenosis phantom using magnetic particle imaging.

  • Robert Siepmann,
  • Henning Nilius,
  • Florian Mueller,
  • Katrin Mueller,
  • Claudio Luisi,
  • Seyed Mohammadali Dadfar,
  • Marcel Straub,
  • Volkmar Schulz,
  • Sebastian Daniel Reinartz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0249697
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. e0249697

Abstract

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IntroductionAim of this study is to evaluate whether magnetic particle imaging (MPI) is capable of measuring velocities occurring in the coronary arteries and to compute coronary flow reserve (CFR) in a canonical phantom as a preliminary study.MethodsFor basic velocity measurements, a circulation phantom was designed containing replaceable glass tubes with three varying inner diameters, matching coronary-vessel diameters. Standardised boluses of superparamagnetic-iron-oxide-nanoparticles were injected and visualised by MPI. Two image-based techniques were competitively applied to calibrate the respective glass tube and to compute the mean velocity: full-duration-at-half-maximum (FDHM) and tracer dilution (TD) method. For CFR-calculation, four necessary settings of the circulation model of a virtual vessel with an inner diameter of 4 mm were generated using differently sized glass tubes and a stenosis model. The respective velocities in stenotic glass tubes were computed without recalibration.ResultsOn velocity level, comparison showed a good agreement (rFDHM = 0.869, rTD = 0.796) between techniques, preferably better for 4 mm and 6 mm inner diameter glass tubes. On CFR level MPI-derived CFR-prediction performed considerably inferior with a relative error of 20-44%.ConclusionsMPI has the ability to reliably measure coronary blood velocities at rest as well as under hyperaemia and therefore may be suitable for CFR calculation. Calibration-associated accuracy of CFR-measurements has to be improved substantially in further studies.