Puncturing Plaques
Autor: | Trisha Roy, Noor Shaikh, Garry Liu, Andrew D. Dueck, Graham A. Wright |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.diagnostic_test Superficial femoral artery business.industry Arterial disease medicine.medical_treatment Magnetic resonance imaging 030204 cardiovascular system & hematology Popliteal artery 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging Puncturing Lesion 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine medicine.artery Angioplasty medicine Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Surgery Tibial artery Radiology medicine.symptom Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business |
Zdroj: | Journal of Endovascular Therapy. 24:35-46 |
ISSN: | 1545-1550 1526-6028 |
DOI: | 10.1177/1526602816671135 |
Popis: | Purpose: To test and validate magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences for peripheral artery lesion characterization and relate the MRI characteristics to the amount of force required for a guidewire to puncture peripheral chronic total occlusions (CTOs) as a surrogate for immediate failure of endovascular therapy. Methods: Diseased superficial femoral, popliteal, and tibial artery segments containing 55 atherosclerotic lesions were excised from the amputated limbs of 7 patients with critical limb ischemia. The lesions were imaged at high resolution (75 μm3 voxels) with T2-weighted (T2W) and ultrashort echo time (UTE) sequences on a 7-T MR scanner. The MR images (n=15) were validated with micro–computed tomography and histology. CTOs (n=40) were classified by their MR signal characteristics as “soft” (signals indicating fat, thrombus, microchannels, or loose fibrous tissue), “hard” (collagen and/or speckled calcium signals), or “calcified” (calcified nodule signals). A 2-kg load cell advanced the back end of a 0.035-inch stiff guidewire at a fixed displacement rate (0.05 mm/s) through the CTOs, and the forces required to cross each lesion were measured. Results: T2W images showed fat as hyperintense and hardened tissue as hypointense. Calcium and thrombus appeared as a signal void in conventional MRI sequences but were easily identified in UTE images (thrombus was hyperintense and calcium hypointense). MRI accurately differentiated “hard,” “soft,” and “calcified” CTOs based on associated guidewire puncture force. The guidewire could not enter “calcified” CTOs (n=6) at all. “Hard” CTOs (n=9) required a significantly higher (p |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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