Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5611971 | Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography | 2007 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Doppler tissue imaging is a method for quantitative analysis of longitudinal myocardial velocity. Commercially available ultrasound systems can only present velocity information using a color Doppler-based overlapping continuous color scale. The analysis is time-consuming and does not allow for simultaneous analysis in different projections. We have developed a new method, velocity tracking, using a stepwise color coding of the regional longitudinal myocardial velocity. The velocity data from 3 apical projections are presented as static and dynamic bull's-eye plots to give a 3-dimensional understanding of the function of the left ventricle. The static bull's-eye plot can display peak systolic velocity, late diastolic tissue velocity, or the sum of peak systolic velocity and early diastolic tissue velocity. Conversely, the dynamic bull's-eye plot displays how the myocardial velocities change over one heart cycle. Velocity tracking allows for a fast, simple, and intuitive visual analysis of the regional longitudinal contraction pattern of the left ventricle with a great potential to identify characteristic pathologic patterns.
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Authors
Anna MSc, Matilda MSc, Reidar MD, PhD, Carl MD, Per MD, Britta MLT, PhD, Lars-Ã
ke MD, PhD,