Publication | Closed Access
Doppler measurement of myocardial thickening with a single epicardial transducer
105
Citations
0
References
1983
Year
Doppler TransducersHeart FailureDoppler TechniqueEngineeringMedical UltrasoundBiomedical EngineeringDiastolic FunctionPulsed Doppler TechniqueBlood Flow MeasurementCardiologyCardiac MechanicRadiologyCardiovascular ImagingMyocardial InfarctionUltrasoundDoppler MeasurementCardiovascular DiseaseElectrophysiologyMedicineAnesthesiology
To eliminate the need for intramyocardial transducers in measuring regional left ventricular (LV) function we have developed a pulsed Doppler technique utilizing a single epicardial transducer. Wall thickening is evaluated by digitally integrating the velocity of myocardial layers passing through the sample volume located at a selected depth. Thickening fraction (TF) can then be estimated by dividing the systolic excursion by the sample volume depth. The Doppler method was compared with the transit-time method in three acute dogs by placing the 4-mm-diameter epicardial Doppler transducer over a 2-mm-diameter endocardial crystal tunneled through the LV wall. With the sample volume set to 1 mm less than the minimum LV thickness, simultaneous measurements of TF by the Doppler and transit-time methods showed good agreement (r = 0.95) during control, ischemia, volume overload, shock, and anoxia. In 28 chronically instrumented piglets signals were obtained for longer periods with Doppler transducers than with transit-time segment-length crystals. We conclude that the Doppler technique provides a high-fidelity wall thickening waveform and a good estimate of TF with minimal disturbance to the ventricle and that the technique is suitable for use in both acute and chronically instrumented animals.