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- Deutsches Zentrum für Herzinsuffizienz (DZHI) (23) (remove)
A novel mono-surface antisymmetric 16-element transmit/receive (Tx/Rx) coil array was designed, simulated, constructed, and tested for cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI) in pigs at 7T. The cardiac array comprised of a mono-surface 16-loops with two central elements arranged antisymmetrically and flanked by seven elements on either side. The array was configured for parallel transmit (pTx) mode to have an eight channel transmit and 16-channel receive (8Tx/16Rx) coil array. Electromagnetic (EM) simulations, bench-top measurements, phantom, and MRI experiments with two pig cadavers (68 and 46 kg) were performed. Finally, the coil was used in pilot in-vivo measurements with a 60 kg pig. Flip angle (FA), geometry factor (g-factor), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) maps, and high-resolution cardiac images were acquired with an in-plane resolution of 0.6 mm x 0.6 mm (in-vivo) and 0.3 mm x 0.3 mm (ex-vivo). The mean g-factor over the heart was 1.26 (R = 6). Static phase B-1(+) shimming in a pig body phantom with the optimal phase vectors makes possible to improve the B-1(+) homogeneity by factor > 2 and transmit efficiency by factor > 3 compared to zero phases (before RF shimming). Parallel imaging performed in the in-vivo measurements demonstrated well preserved diagnostic quality of the resulting images at acceleration factors up to R = 6. The described hardware design can be adapted for arrays optimized for animals and humans with a larger number of elements (32-64) while maintaining good decoupling for various MRI applications at UHF (e.g., cardiac, head, and spine).
We aimed to investigate the image quality of the U-SPECT5/CT E-Class a micro single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) system with two large stationary detectors for visualization of rat hearts and bones using clinically available \(^{99m}\)Tc-labelled tracers. Sensitivity, spatial resolution, uniformity and contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) of the small-animal SPECT scanner were investigated in phantom studies using an ultra-high-resolution rat and mouse multi-pinhole collimator (UHR-RM). Point source, hot-rod, and uniform phantoms with \(^{99m}\)Tc-solution were scanned for high-count performance assessment and count levels equal to animal scans, respectively. Reconstruction was performed using the similarity-regulated ordered-subsets expectation maximization (SROSEM) algorithm with Gaussian smoothing. Rats were injected with similar to 100 MBq [\(^{99m}\)TcTc-MIBI or similar to 150 MBq [\(^{99m}\)Tc]Tc-HMDP and received multi-frame micro-SPECT imaging after tracer distribution. Animal scans were reconstructed for three different acquisition times and post-processed with different sized Gaussian filters. Following reconstruction, CNR was calculated and image quality evaluated by three independent readers on a five-point scale from 1="very poor" to 5="very good". Point source sensitivity was 567 cps/MBq and radioactive rods as small as 1.2 mm were resolved with the UHR-RM collimator. Collimator-dependent uniformity was 55.5%. Phantom CNR improved with increasing rod size, filter size and activity concentration. Left ventricle and bone structures were successfully visualized in rat experiments. Image quality was strongly affected by the extent of post-filtering, whereas scan time did not have substantial influence on visual assessment. Good image quality was achieved for resolution range greater than 1.8 mm in bone and 2.8 mm in heart. The recently introduced small animal SPECT system with two stationary detectors and UHR-RM collimator is capable to provide excellent image quality in heart and bone scans in a rat using standardized reconstruction parameters and appropriate post-filtering. However, there are still challenges in achieving maximum system resolution in the sub-millimeter range with in vivo settings under limited injection dose and acquisition time.
Aims Acute myocardial infarction (MI) is the major cause of chronic heart failure. The activity of blood coagulation factor XIII (FXIIIa) plays an important role in rodents as a healing factor after MI, whereas its role in healing and remodelling processes in humans remains unclear. We prospectively evaluated the relevance of FXIIIa after acute MI as a potential early prognostic marker for adequate healing.
Methods and results This monocentric prospective cohort study investigated cardiac remodelling in patients with ST-elevation MI and followed them up for 1 year. Serum FXIIIa was serially assessed during the first 9 days after MI and after 2, 6, and 12 months. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging was performed within 4 days after MI (Scan 1), after 7 to 9 days (Scan 2), and after 12 months (Scan 3). The FXIII valine-to-leucine (V34L) single-nucleotide polymorphism rs5985 was genotyped. One hundred forty-six patients were investigated (mean age 58 ± 11 years, 13% women). Median FXIIIa was 118 % (quartiles, 102–132%) and dropped to a trough on the second day after MI: 109%(98–109%; P < 0.001). FXIIIa recovered slowly over time, reaching the baseline level after 2 to 6 months and surpassed baseline levels only after 12 months: 124 % (110–142%). The development of FXIIIa after MI was independent of the genotype. FXIIIa on Day 2 was strongly and inversely associated with the relative size of MI in Scan 1 (Spearman’s ρ = –0.31; P = 0.01) and Scan 3 (ρ = –0.39; P < 0.01) and positively associated with left ventricular ejection fraction: ρ = 0.32 (P < 0.01) and ρ = 0.24 (P = 0.04), respectively.
Conclusions FXIII activity after MI is highly dynamic, exhibiting a significant decline in the early healing period, with reconstitution 6 months later. Depressed FXIIIa early after MI predicted a greater size of MI and lower left ventricular ejection fraction after 1 year. The clinical relevance of these findings awaits to be tested in a randomized trial.
Die nicht-invasive Gefäßdiagnostik stellt einen wichtigen Pfeiler in der Prävention von Herz-Kreislauferkrankungen dar. Während lange Zeit die sonographische Messung der cIMT, als morphologisches Korrelat der Gefäßalterung, als Goldstandard galt, ist in den letzten Jahren in Gestalt der Pulswellenanalyse/PWV-Messung eine Technik weiterentwickelt worden, die, als funktionelles Korrelat der Gefäßalterung, aufgrund der leichteren Durchführbarkeit und geringerer Untersucherabhängigkeit und Kosten vielversprechend ist. So erlaubt die Messung der Pulswelle mittels gewöhnlicher Blutdruckmanschetten, genau wie die cIMT, die Berechnung des individuellen Gefäßalters und die Diagnostik für das Vorliegen eines Endorganschadens der Blutgefäße.
Um die Messergebnisse der beiden Untersuchungen miteinander zu vergleichen, wurden beide in der EUROASPIRE-IV Studie an Patienten mit koronarer Herzkrankheit durchgeführt. Die Auswertung der Messergebnisse der mit dem Vascular Explorer durchgeführten Pulswellenanalyse/PWV-Messung ergab überraschenderweise, dass die Mehrheit der herzkranken Patienten weder eine vaskuläre Voralterung noch einen Endorganschaden der Blutgefäße aufweisen. Im Falle der cIMT-Messung war Gegenteiliges der Fall, was trotz der medikamentösen Therapie der Patienten so zu erwarten war. Weiterhin zeigte sich lediglich eine geringe Korrelation zwischen den Messergebnissen beider Untersuchungen. Die Determinanten der einzelnen Messwerte aus cIMT und Pulswellenanalyse/PWV-Messung waren deckungsgleich mit den in der Literatur beschriebenen Faktoren, wenn auch viele der sonst signifikanten Regressoren das Signifikanzniveau in unserer Auswertung nicht unterschritten.
Eine Limitation der funktionellen Gefäßdiagnostik liegt derzeit darin, dass die Messergebnisse stark von dem verwendeten Messgerät abhängen. Es liegen noch zu wenig Vergleichsstudien vor, um die Messergebnisse, speziell von neueren Geräten wie dem Vascular Explorer, auf andere zu übertragen. Bei der Berechnung des Gefäßalters sollten daher optimalerweise gerätespezifische Normwerte vorliegen, was beim Vascular Explorer nicht der Fall ist. Gleiches gilt für die Verwendung des PWVcf-Grenzwerts für die Diagnose eines Endorganschadens der Blutgefäße.
Analog hat auch die Messung der cIMT gewisse Einschränkungen. So wäre eine weitere Standardisierung der Messorte (A. carotis communis vs Bulbus vs A. carotis interna), zwischen denen sich die durchschnittliche cIMT erheblich unterscheidet, sowie der Messparameter (Minimal- vs Maximal- vs Mittelwert) wünschenswert. Die universelle Anwendung eines cIMT-Grenzwerts zur Diagnose eines Endorganschadens der Blutgefäße ist daher kritisch zu sehen. Dies zeigt sich auch darin, dass in den neuesten Leitlinien der bislang geltende Grenzwert angezweifelt und kein aktuell gültiger Grenzwert mehr genannt wird.
Wir interpretieren unsere Ergebnisse dahingehend, dass unsere Messung der cIMT die zu erwartende pathologische Gefäßalterung bei Patienten mit koronarer Herzkrankheit besser widerspiegelt als die Messung der Pulswelle mit dem Vascular Explorer. Welche der beiden Untersuchungen hinsichtlich der prognostischen Wertigkeit überlegen ist, muss im Rahmen von Längsschnittstudien geklärt werden.
Background
Pain is an early symptom of Fabry disease (FD) and is characterized by a unique phenotype with mainly episodic acral and triggerable burning pain. Recently, we designed and validated the first pain questionnaire for adult FD patients in an interview and a self-administered version in German: the Wurzburg Fabry Pain Questionnaire (FPQ). We now report the validation of the English version of the self-administered FPQ (enFPQ).
Methods
After two forward-backward translations of the FPQ by native German and native English speakers, the enFPQ was applied at The Mark Holland Metabolic Unit, Manchester, UK for validation. Consecutive patients with genetically ascertained FD and current or previous FD pain underwent a face-to-face interview using the enFPQ. Two weeks later, patients filled in the self-administered enFPQ at home. The agreement between entries collected by supervised administration and self-administration of the enFPQ was assessed via Gwet's AC1-statistics (AC1) for nominal-scaled scores and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for interval-scaled elements.
Results
Eighty-three FD patients underwent the face-to-face interview and 54 patients sent back a completed self-administered version of the enFPQ 2 weeks later. We found high agreement with a mean AC1-statistics of 0.725 for 55 items, and very high agreement with a mean ICC of 0.811 for 9 items.
Conclusions
We provide the validated English version of the FPQ for self-administration in adult FD patients. The enFPQ collects detailed information on the individual FD pain phenotype and thus builds a solid basis for better pain classification and treatment in patients with FD.
Purpose
The aim of this study was to compare the wave‐CAIPI (controlled aliasing in parallel imaging) trajectory to the Cartesian sampling for accelerated free‐breathing 4D lung MRI.
Methods
The wave‐CAIPI k‐space trajectory was implemented in a respiratory self‐gated 3D spoiled gradient echo pulse sequence. Trajectory correction applying the gradient system transfer function was used, and images were reconstructed using an iterative conjugate gradient SENSE (CG SENSE) algorithm. Five healthy volunteers and one patient with squamous cell carcinoma in the lung were examined on a clinical 3T scanner, using both sampling schemes. For quantitative comparison of wave‐CAIPI and standard Cartesian imaging, the normalized mutual information and the RMS error between retrospectively accelerated acquisitions and their respective references were calculated. The SNR ratios were investigated in a phantom study.
Results
The obtained normalized mutual information values indicate a lower information loss due to acceleration for the wave‐CAIPI approach. Average normalized mutual information values of the wave‐CAIPI acquisitions were 10% higher, compared with Cartesian sampling. Furthermore, the RMS error of the wave‐CAIPI technique was lower by 19% and the SNR was higher by 14%. Especially for short acquisition times (down to 1 minute), the undersampled Cartesian images showed an increased artifact level, compared with wave‐CAIPI.
Conclusion
The application of the wave‐CAIPI technique to 4D lung MRI reduces undersampling artifacts, in comparison to a Cartesian acquisition of the same scan time. The benefit of wave‐CAIPI sampling can therefore be traded for shorter examinations, or enhancing image quality of undersampled 4D lung acquisitions, keeping the scan time constant.
Impact of Interparticle Interaction on Thermodynamics of Nano-Channel Transport of Two Species
(2020)
Understanding the function and control of channel transport is of paramount importance for cell physiology and nanotechnology. In particular, if several species are involved, the mechanisms of selectivity, competition, cooperation, pumping, and its modulation need to be understood. What lacks is a rigorous mathematical approach within the framework of stochastic thermodynamics, which explains the impact of interparticle in-channel interactions on the transport properties of the respective species. To achieve this, stochastic channel transport of two species is considered in a model, which different from mean field approaches, explicitly conserves the spatial correlation of the species within the channel by analysis of the stochastic dynamics within a state space, the elements of which are the channel’s spatial occupation states. The interparticle interactions determine the stochastic transitions between these states. Local flow and entropy production in this state space reveal the respective particle flows through the channel and the intensity of the Brownian ratchet like rectifying forces, which these species exert mutually on each other, together with its thermodynamic effectiveness and costs. Perfect coupling of transport of the two species is realized by an attractive empty channel and strong repulsive forces between particles of the same species. This confines the state space to a subspace with circular topology, in which the concentration gradients as thermodynamic driving forces act in series, and channel flow of both species becomes equivalent. For opposing concentration gradients, this makes the species with the stronger gradient the driving, positive entropy producing one; the other is driven and produces negative entropy. Gradients equal in magnitude make all flows vanish, and thermodynamic equilibrium occurs. A differential interparticle interaction with less repulsive forces within particles of one species but maintenance of this interaction for the other species adds a bypass path to this circular subspace. On this path, which is not involved in coupling of the two species, a leak flow of the species with less repulsive interparticle interaction emerges, which is directed parallel to its concentration gradient and, hence, produces positive entropy here. Different from the situation with perfect coupling, appropriate strong opposing concentration gradients may simultaneously parallelize the flow of their respective species, which makes each species produce positive entropy. The rectifying potential of the species with the bypass option is diminished. This implies the existence of a gradient of the other species, above which its flow and gradient are parallel for any gradient of the less coupled species. The opposite holds for the less coupled species. Its flow may always be rectified and turned anti-parallel to its gradient by a sufficiently strong opposing gradient of the other one.
Aims
Treating patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF) presenting with volume overload is a common task. However, optimal guidance of decongesting therapy and treatment targets are not well defined. The inferior vena cava (IVC) diameter and its collapsibility can be used to estimate right atrial pressure, which is a measure of right‐sided haemodynamic congestion. The CAVA‐ADHF‐DZHK10 trial is designed to test the hypothesis that ultrasound assessment of the IVC in addition to clinical assessment improves decongestion as compared with clinical assessment alone.
Methods and results
CAVA‐ADHF‐DZHK10 is a randomized, controlled, patient‐blinded, multicentre, parallel‐group trial randomly assigning 388 patients with ADHF to either decongesting therapy guided by ultrasound assessment of the IVC in addition to clinical assessment or clinical assessment alone. IVC ultrasound will be performed daily between baseline and hospital discharge in all patients. However, ultrasound results will only be reported to treating physicians in the intervention group. Treatment target is relief of congestion‐related signs and symptoms in both groups with the additional goal to reduce the IVC diameter ≤21 mm and increase IVC collapsibility >50% in the intervention group. The primary endpoint is change in N‐terminal pro‐brain natriuretic peptide from baseline to hospital discharge. Secondary endpoints evaluate feasibility, efficacy of decongestion on other scales, and the impact of the intervention on clinical endpoints.
Conclusions
CAVA‐ADHF‐DZHK10 will investigate whether IVC ultrasound supplementing clinical assessment improves decongestion in patients admitted for ADHF.
Purpose:
Bolus‐based dynamic contrast agent (CA) perfusion measurements of the heart are subject to systematic errors due to CA bolus dispersion in the coronary arteries. To better understand these effects on quantification of myocardial blood flow and myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR), an in‐silico model of the coronary arteries down to the pre‐arteriolar vessels has been developed.
Methods:
In this work, a computational fluid dynamics analysis is performed to investigate these errors on the basis of realistic 3D models of the left and right porcine coronary artery trees, including vessels at the pre‐arteriolar level. Using advanced boundary conditions, simulations of blood flow and CA transport are conducted at rest and under stress. These are evaluated with regard to dispersion (assessed by the width of CA concentration time curves and associated vascular transport functions) and errors of myocardial blood flow and myocardial perfusion reserve quantification.
Results:
Contrast agent dispersion increases with traveled distance as well as vessel diameter, and decreases with higher flow velocities. Overall, the average myocardial blood flow errors are −28% ± 16% and −8.5% ± 3.3% at rest and stress, respectively, and the average myocardial perfusion reserve error is 26% ± 22%. The calculated values are different in the left and right coronary tree.
Conclusion:
Contrast agent dispersion is dependent on a complex interplay of several different factors characterizing the cardiovascular bed, including vessel size and integrated vascular length. Quantification errors evoked by the observed CA dispersion show nonnegligible distortion in dynamic CA bolus‐based perfusion measurements. We expect future improvements of quantitative perfusion measurements to make the systematic errors described here more apparent.
Einleitung:
TRPC-Kanäle spielen eine wichtige Rolle in der Pathologie der Herzinsuffizienz und kardialen Hypertrophie. Diese Effekte werden unter anderem über den Calcineurin-NFAT-Signalweg vermittelt. Ein wichtiger Interaktionspartner und Regulator von TRPC-Kanälen ist das Protein FKBP52. Mittels eines Yeast Two-Hybrid Systems wurde in einer kardialen cDNA library eine Interaktion zwischen einem C-terminalen Fragment von TRPC3 (AS 742-848), welches außerhalb der bekannten FKBP-Bindungsdomäne (AS 703-714) liegt, und FKBP52 beobachtet. Da dies eine weitere Bindungsstelle in FKBP52 vermuten ließ, erzeugten wir ein Fragment von FKBP52, welches FKBP52s genannt wurde und dem die funktionell relevante PPIase I-Domäne mit der bekannten Bindungsstelle fehlt. Eine erste Co-IP zwischen diesem Fragment und TRPC3 war erfolgreich.
Ziel:
Die Bestimmung, ob die Anwesenheit des verkürzten FKBP52 in vivo die Komplexbildung aus TRPC3 bzw. TRPC4 und dem Wildtyp-FKBP52 unterdrückt. Zusätzlich, ob FKBP52s die Interaktion zwischen TRPC3 bzw. TRPC4 und Calcineurin in vivo unterbricht und damit die Aktivierung des Calcineurin-NFAT-Signalweges hemmt.
Methoden:
Co-Immunopräzipitationen (Co-IP) wurden mit HEK-293-Zellen durchgeführt, die mit cDNA transfiziert wurden, welche Gene für TRPC3, TRPC4, Calcineurin A und FKBP52s enthielt. Zur Bestimmung der nukleären Translokation von NFATc1 mittels Fluoreszenzmikroskopie wurden HEK-293-Zellen mit TRPC3, TRPC4, GFP-NFATc1 ± FKBP52s transfiziert. Die statistische Analyse erfolgte mit einer One-Way ANOVA.
Ergebnisse:
In dieser Arbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass FKBP52 sowohl mit TRPC3 als auch mit TRPC4 interagiert. Ebenso wurde festgestellt, dass FKBP52 auch ohne seine katalytische PPIase I-Domäne Bindungen mit TRPC3 bzw. TRPC4 eingeht. Dieses FKBP52-Konstrukt nimmt ebenso an der Komplexbildung mit TRPC3 bzw. TRPC4 und Calcineurin teil. Des Weiteren ließ sich für TRPC3 zeigen, dass unter Stimulation mit Carbachol (GPCR-Agonist) bei Anwesenheit dieses gekürzten FKBP52 eine signifikant geringere Aktivierung und Wanderung des Transkriptionsfaktors NFAT in den Nucleus erfolgte.
Schlussfolgerung:
FKBP52 spielt daher eine wichtige Rolle in dieser Signalkaskade, indem es entscheidend an der Aktivierung von Calcineurin und dessen Rekrutierung zum TRPC-Kanalkomplex beteiligt ist und damit auch an der Aktivierung des Calcineurin-NFAT-Signalweges.