Publication | Open Access
Respiratory Motion of the Heart From Free Breathing Coronary Angiograms
149
Citations
25
References
2004
Year
Heart FailureRespiratory MotionRespiratory Motion CompensationDiastolic FunctionKinesiologyBiomechanicsKinematicsBlood Flow MeasurementCardiologyCardiac MechanicHealth SciencesCardiovascular ImagingPulmonary CirculationMedical ImagingRespiration (Physiology)Coronary ArteriesCardiovascular DiseaseCoronary UnitPhysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicine
Respiratory motion compensation for cardiac imaging requires knowledge of the heart's motion and deformation during breathing. This paper presents a method for measuring the natural tidal respiratory motion of the heart from free breathing coronary angiograms. A three-dimensional (3-D) deformation field describing the cardiac and respiratory motion of the coronary arteries is recovered from a biplane acquisition. A cardiac respiratory parametric model is formulated and used to decompose the deformation field into cardiac and respiratory components. Angiograms from ten patients were analyzed. A 3-D translation motion model was sufficient for describing the motion of the heart in only two patients. For all patients, the heart translated caudally (mean, 4.9+/-1.9 mm; range, 2.4 to 8.0 mm) and underwent a cranio-dorsal rotation (mean, 1.5 degrees+/-0.9 degrees; range, 0.2 degrees to 3.5 degrees) during inspiration. In eight patients, the heart also translated anteriorly (mean, 1.3+/-1.8 mm; range, -0.4 to 5.1 mm) and rotated in a caudo-dextral direction (mean, 1.2 degrees+/-1.3 degrees; range, -1.9 degrees to 3.2 degrees).
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