Background
Wall shear stress (WSS) may be associated with the onset and development of aortopathy in the presence of bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) [Michelena, JAMA (2011)]. The use of 'aortic atlases' of 3D WSS vectors allows for systematic analysis of WSS differences between large patient cohorts. In this study, a comparison is performed between WSS atlases of BAV patients, BAV patients with aortic dilation, patients with BAV stenosis, and healthy controls with tricuspid valves. The aim is to test the hypothesis that WSS atlases can identify regions of significantly altered WSS that are associated with different expression of BAV and aortopathy.
Methods
Prospectively ECG and respiratory gated 4D flow MRI was performed in 10 healthy controls, 10 BAV patients, 10 BAV patients with aortic dilation (as defined by aorta diameter > 4 cm), and 10 patients with BAV stenosis (table 1) on 1.5 and 3T systems (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany). Imaging parameters were: resolution = 1.7-3.6 × 1.7-2.4 × 2.2-3.2 mm3, temporal resolution = 37-43 ms, TE/TR/FA/VENC = 2.2-2.8 ms/4.6-5.4 ms/7-15°/150-300 m/s. The data were corrected for Maxwell terms, eddy currents and velocity aliasing. Segmentation of the aorta was performed in MIMICS (Materialise, Leuven, Belgium) using PC-MRA images. WSS along the entire segmented aorta surface was calculated as previously described [van Ooij, JMRI (2013)]. WSS atlases were created as follows: the segmentations of the aorta for each cohort were co-registered. By maximizing the degree of overlap, the geometry that showed the smallest deviation with the average aorta shape in the cohort was chosen. The WSS vectors of each subject were interpolated onto this geometry and averaged over all subjects, resulting in the cohort specific WSS atlas. Mean WSS was calculated in the ascending aorta (AAo), arch and descending aorta (DAo). For statistical analysis, a shared geometry was created from the 4 atlas geometries and each individual aortic WSS was interpolated to this shared geometry.
Results
Figure 1 shows the cohort-specific WSS atlases. WSS was significantly higher for all BAV cohorts compared to the control atlas (Table 1). The BAV with dilation cohort showed the highest WSS which was significantly increased compared to the control atlas in a large part of the aorta (Table 1). Furthermore, WSS direction showed the highest deviation in the AAo (median: 46°) from the control atlas for the BAV with dilation cohort.
Conclusions
WSS atlases demonstrate the ability to regionally detect that all BAV patients exhibit significantly elevated WSS compared to healthy volunteers with tricuspid valves.
Funding
NIH NHLBI grant R01HL115828; American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant 13SDG14360004.
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van Ooij, P., Potters, W.V., Nederveen, A.J. et al. Thoracic aortic wall shear stress atlases in patients with bicuspid aortic valves. J Cardiovasc Magn Reson 16 (Suppl 1), P161 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-16-S1-P161
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429X-16-S1-P161