Circulation, Vol 69, 418-429, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
G Maurer, K Ong, R Haendchen, M Torres, C Tei, F Wood, S Meerbaum, P Shah and E Corday
A computer algorithm was developed and applied to measure brightness decay
rates of myocardial contrast opacification observed with two- dimensional
echocardiography (2DE). An agitated mixture of diatrizoate meglumine and
saline (Renografin-saline) was injected into the left main coronary artery
of 17 closed-chest dogs during the control state as well as after placement
of an intracoronary plug to induce 85% stenosis in the left anterior
descending coronary artery (LAD) in five dogs. In 12 dogs, injections were
also performed distally to complete intracoronary balloon occlusion of the
LAD. For each injection, up to 35 electrocardiographic-gated, end-diastolic
2DE frames were digitized into an image-processing computer that determined
mean pixel brightness of each of 12 myocardial segments per 2DE short-axis
cross-section. Time-activity curves for each segment were generated, and
contrast decay half-life (t 1/2) was calculated. Mean t 1/2 for
control-state injections was found to be 24.1 +/- 7.7 sec, as opposed to
293.8 +/- 164.5 sec after complete coronary occlusion (p less than .001).
In the five dogs in which 85% LAD stenosis was induced, prolongation of
contrast t 1/2 from 18.3 +/- 8.9 sec during control to 44.3 +/- 21.0 sec (p
less than .001) after plug insertion occurred in myocardial segments
subserved by the stenosed vessel. No significant change occurred in
segments that were not supplied by the stenosed vessel (21.9 +/- 9.1 sec
during control vs 24.9 +/- 11.6 after plug insertion into the LAD). A
reproducibility study of injection-to-injection t 1/2 in the control state
indicated a correlation coefficient of r = .84 and a standard error of the
estimate (SEE) equal to 5.86 sec, while interobserver t 1/2 reproducibility
was r = .91 and SEE = 5.21 sec. The t 1/2 measurement derived by computer
analysis of myocardial contrast 2DE may serve as an index for
characterization of regional myocardial blood flow and may be applicable to
evaluate interventions that alter perfusion.
ARTICLES
Myocardial contrast two-dimensional echocardiography: comparison of contrast disappearance rates in normal and underperfused myocardium
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