Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5485534 | Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
This study evaluated the feasibility of employing non-invasive intra-cardiac pressure estimation using subharmonic signals from ultrasound contrast agents in humans. This institutional review board-approved proof-of-concept study included 15 consenting patients scheduled for left and right heart catheterization. During the catheterization procedure, Definity was infused intra-venously at 4-10Â mL/min. Ultrasound scanning was performed with a Sonix RP using pulse inversion, three incident acoustic output levels and 2.5-MHz transmit frequency. Radiofrequency data were processed and subharmonic amplitudes were compared with the pressure catheter data. The correlation coefficient between subharmonic signals and pressure catheter data ranged from â0.3 to â0.9. For acquisitions with optimum acoustic output, pressure errors between the subharmonic technique and catheter were as low as 2.6Â mmHg. However, automatically determining optimum acoustic output during scanning for each patient remains to be addressed before clinical applicability can be decided.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Acoustics and Ultrasonics
Authors
Jaydev K. Dave, Sushmita V. Kulkarni, Purva P. Pangaonkar, Maria Stanczak, Maureen E. McDonald, Ira S. Cohen, Praveen Mehrotra, Michael P. Savage, Paul Walinsky, Nicholas J. II, David L. Fischman, David Ogilby, Carolyn VanWhy, Matthew Lombardi,