ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC ASSESSMENT OF LEFT BUNDLE BRANCH-RELATED STRAIN DYSSYNCHRONY: A COMPARISON WITH TAGGED MRI

Louis S. Fixsen*, Anouk G. W. de Lepper, Marc Strik, Lars B. van Middendorp, Frits W. Prinzen, Frans N. van de Vosse, Patrick Houthuizen, Richard G. P. Lopata

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Recent studies have shown the efficacy of myocardial strain estimated using speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) in predicting response to cardiac resynchronisation therapy. This study focuses on circumferential strain patterns, comparing STE-acquired strains to tagged-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI-T). Second, the effect of regularisation was examined. Two-dimensional parasternal ultrasound (US) and MRI-T data were acquired in the left ventricular short-axis view of canines before (n = 8) and after (n = 9) left bunch branch block (LBBB) induction. US-based strain analysis was performed on Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine data at the mid-level using three overall methods ("Commercial software," "Basic block-matching," "regularised block-matching"). Moreover, three regularisation approaches were implemented and compared. MRI-T analysis was performed using SinMod. Normalised regional circumferential strain curves, based on standard six or septal/lateral segments, were analysed and cross-correlated with MRI-T data. Systolic strain (SS) and septal rebound stretch (SRS) were calculated and compared. Overall agreement of normalised circumferential strain was good between all methods on a global and regional level. All STE methods showed a bias (>= 4% strain) toward higher SS estimates. Pre-LBBB, septal and lateral segment correlation was excellent between the Basic (mean rho = 0.96) and regularised (mean rho = 0.97) methods and MRI-T. The Commercial method showed a significant discrepancy between the two walls (septal rho = 0.94, lateral rho = 0.68). Correlation with MRI-T reduced between pre- and post-LBBB (Commercial rho = 0.79, Basic rho = 0.82, mean regularised rho = 0.86). Septal strain patterns and SRS varied with the STE software and type of regularisation, with all STE methods estimating nonzero SRS values pre-LBBB. Absolute values showed moderate agreement, with a bias for higher strain from STE. SRS varied with the type of software and extra regularisation applied. Open efforts are needed to understand the underlying causes of differences between STE methods before standardisation can be achieved. This is particularly important given the apparent clinical value of strain-based parameters such as SRS. (C) 2019 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of World Federation for Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2063-2074
Number of pages12
JournalUltrasound in Medicine and Biology
Volume45
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2019

Keywords

  • Echocardiography
  • LBBB
  • Dyssynchrony
  • Speckle tracking
  • Regularisation
  • CARDIAC RESYNCHRONIZATION THERAPY
  • SPECKLE-TRACKING ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY
  • GLOBAL LONGITUDINAL STRAIN
  • HEART-FAILURE
  • MYOCARDIAL STRAIN
  • REGIONAL STRAIN
  • TASK-FORCE
  • REPRODUCIBILITY
  • DYSFUNCTION
  • CANDIDATES

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