Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 12 de 12
Filtrar
1.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ; 379(2212): 20200257, 2021 Dec 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34689630

RESUMEN

Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is a valuable modality in the diagnosis and characterization of cardiovascular diseases, since it can identify abnormalities in structure and function of the myocardium non-invasively and without the need for ionizing radiation. However, in clinical practice, it is commonly acquired as a collection of separated and independent 2D image planes, which limits its accuracy in 3D analysis. This paper presents a completely automated pipeline for generating patient-specific 3D biventricular heart models from cine magnetic resonance (MR) slices. Our pipeline automatically selects the relevant cine MR images, segments them using a deep learning-based method to extract the heart contours, and aligns the contours in 3D space correcting possible misalignments due to breathing or subject motion first using the intensity and contours information from the cine data and next with the help of a statistical shape model. Finally, the sparse 3D representation of the contours is used to generate a smooth 3D biventricular mesh. The computational pipeline is applied and evaluated in a CMR dataset of 20 healthy subjects. Our results show an average reduction of misalignment artefacts from 1.82 ± 1.60 mm to 0.72 ± 0.73 mm over 20 subjects, in terms of distance from the final reconstructed mesh. The high-resolution 3D biventricular meshes obtained with our computational pipeline are used for simulations of electrical activation patterns, showing agreement with non-invasive electrocardiographic imaging. The automatic methodologies presented here for patient-specific MR imaging-based 3D biventricular representations contribute to the efficient realization of precision medicine, enabling the enhanced interpretability of clinical data, the digital twin vision through patient-specific image-based modelling and simulation, and augmented reality applications. This article is part of the theme issue 'Advanced computation in cardiovascular physiology: new challenges and opportunities'.


Asunto(s)
Imagenología Tridimensional , Imagen por Resonancia Cinemagnética , Corazón/diagnóstico por imagen , Humanos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética
2.
IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med ; 9: 4900214, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33489483

RESUMEN

Many clinical procedures would benefit from direct and intuitive real-time visualization of anatomy, surgical plans, or other information crucial to the procedure. Three-dimensional augmented reality (3D-AR) is an emerging technology that has the potential to assist physicians with spatial reasoning during clinical interventions. The most intriguing applications of 3D-AR involve visualizations of anatomy or surgical plans that appear directly on the patient. However, commercially available 3D-AR devices have spatial localization errors that are too large for many clinical procedures. For this reason, a variety of approaches for improving 3D-AR registration accuracy have been explored. The focus of this review is on the methods, accuracy, and clinical applications of registering 3D-AR devices with the clinical environment. The works cited represent a variety of approaches for registering holograms to patients, including manual registration, computer vision-based registration, and registrations that incorporate external tracking systems. Evaluations of user accuracy when performing clinically relevant tasks suggest that accuracies of approximately 2 mm are feasible. 3D-AR device limitations due to the vergence-accommodation conflict or other factors attributable to the headset hardware add on the order of 1.5 mm of error compared to conventional guidance. Continued improvements to 3D-AR hardware will decrease these sources of error.


Asunto(s)
Realidad Aumentada , Cirugía Asistida por Computador , Humanos , Imagenología Tridimensional
3.
Virtual Augment Mixed Real (2021) ; 12770: 117-133, 2021 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35079751

RESUMEN

The extended realities, including virtual, augmented, and mixed realities (VAMR) have recently experienced significant hardware improvement resulting in an expansion in medical applications. These applications can be classified by the target end user (for instance, classifying applications as patient-centric, physician-centric, or both) or by use case (for instance educational, diagnostic tools, therapeutic tools, or some combination). When developing medical applications in VAMR, careful consideration of both the target end user and use case must heavily influence design considerations, particularly methods and tools for interaction and navigation. Medical imaging consists of both 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional medical imaging which impacts design, interaction, and navigation. Additionally, medical applications need to comply with regulatory considerations which will also influence interaction and design considerations. In this manuscript, the authors explore these considerations using three VAMR tools being developed for cardiac electrophysiology procedures.

4.
J Am Heart Assoc ; 8(18): e012097, 2019 09 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31496332

RESUMEN

Background The relationship between structural pathology and electrophysiological substrate in cardiac amyloidosis is unclear. Differences between light-chain (AL) and transthyretin (ATTR) cardiac amyloidosis may have prognostic implications. Methods and Results ECG imaging and cardiac magnetic resonance studies were conducted in 21 cardiac amyloidosis patients (11 AL and 10 ATTR). Healthy volunteers were included as controls. With respect to ATTR, AL patients had lower amyloid volume (51.0/37.7 versus 73.7/16.4 mL, P=0.04), lower myocardial cell volume (42.6/19.1 versus 58.5/17.2 mL, P=0.021), and higher T1 (1172/64 versus 1109/80 ms, P=0.022) and T2 (53.4/2.9 versus 50.0/3.1 ms, P=0.003). ECG imaging revealed differences between cardiac amyloidosis and control patients in virtually all conduction-repolarization parameters. With respect to ATTR, AL patients had lower epicardial signal amplitude (1.07/0.46 versus 1.83/1.26 mV, P=0.026), greater epicardial signal fractionation (P=0.019), and slightly higher dispersion of repolarization (187.6/65 versus 158.3/40 ms, P=0.062). No significant difference between AL and ATTR patients was found using the standard 12-lead ECG. T1 correlated with epicardial signal amplitude (cc=-0.78), and extracellular volume with epicardial signal fractionation (cc=0.48) and repolarization time (cc=0.43). Univariate models based on single features from both cardiac magnetic resonance and ECG imaging classified AL and ATTR patients with an accuracy of 70% to 80%. Conclusions In this exploratory study cardiac amyloidosis was associated with ventricular conduction and repolarization abnormalities, which were more pronounced in AL than in ATTR. Combined ECG imaging-cardiac magnetic resonance analysis supports the hypothesis that additional mechanisms beyond infiltration may contribute to myocardial damage in AL amyloidosis. Further studies are needed to assess the clinical impact of this approach.


Asunto(s)
Neuropatías Amiloides Familiares/diagnóstico por imagen , Técnicas de Imagen Cardíaca/métodos , Cardiomiopatías/diagnóstico por imagen , Amiloidosis de Cadenas Ligeras de las Inmunoglobulinas/diagnóstico por imagen , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Neuropatías Amiloides Familiares/fisiopatología , Amiloidosis/diagnóstico por imagen , Amiloidosis/fisiopatología , Cardiomiopatías/fisiopatología , Estudios de Casos y Controles , Electrocardiografía , Femenino , Humanos , Amiloidosis de Cadenas Ligeras de las Inmunoglobulinas/fisiopatología , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Pericardio/diagnóstico por imagen , Pericardio/fisiopatología
6.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28705875

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is a significant cause of sudden cardiac death in the young. Improved noninvasive assessment of ARVC and better understanding of the disease substrate are important for improving patient outcomes. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 20 genotyped ARVC patients with a broad spectrum of disease using electrocardiographic imaging (a method for noninvasive cardiac electrophysiology mapping) and advanced late gadolinium enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance scar imaging. Compared with 20 healthy controls, ARVC patients had longer ventricular activation duration (median, 52 versus 42 ms; P=0.007) and prolonged mean epicardial activation-recovery intervals (a surrogate for local action potential duration; median, 275 versus 241 ms; P=0.014). In these patients, we observed abnormal and varied epicardial activation breakthrough locations and regions of nonuniform conduction and fractionated electrograms. Nonuniform conduction and fractionated electrograms were present in the early concealed phase of ARVC. Electrophysiological abnormalities colocalized with late gadolinium enhancement scar, indicating a relationship with structural disease. Premature ventricular contractions were common in ARVC patients with variable initiation sites in both ventricles. Premature ventricular contraction rate increased with exercise, and within anatomic segments, it correlated with prolonged repolarization, electric markers of scar, and late gadolinium enhancement (all P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Electrocardiographic imaging reveals electrophysiological substrate properties that differ in ARVC patients compared with healthy controls. A novel mechanistic finding is the presence of repolarization abnormalities in regions where ventricular ectopy originates. The results suggest a potential role for electrocardiographic imaging and late gadolinium enhancement in early diagnosis and noninvasive follow-up of ARVC patients.


Asunto(s)
Displasia Ventricular Derecha Arritmogénica/diagnóstico , Electrocardiografía/métodos , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética/métodos , Adulto , Anciano , Displasia Ventricular Derecha Arritmogénica/fisiopatología , Estudios de Casos y Controles , Cicatriz/fisiopatología , Medios de Contraste , Diagnóstico Precoz , Femenino , Genotipo , Sistema de Conducción Cardíaco/fisiopatología , Humanos , Masculino , Meglumina , Persona de Mediana Edad , Compuestos Organometálicos
7.
Circ Arrhythm Electrophysiol ; 5(4): 773-81, 2012 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22772896

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Cardiac memory refers to the observation that altered cardiac electrical activation results in repolarization changes that persist after the restoration of a normal activation pattern. Animal studies, however, have yielded disparate conclusions, both regarding the spatial pattern of repolarization changes in cardiac memory and the underlying mechanisms. The present study was undertaken to produce 3-dimensional images of the repolarization changes underlying long-term cardiac memory in humans. METHODS AND RESULTS: Nine adult subjects with structurally normal hearts and dual-chamber pacemakers were enrolled in the study. Noninvasive electrocardiographic imaging was used before and after 1 month of ventricular pacing to reconstruct epicardial activation and repolarization patterns. Eight subjects exhibited cardiac memory in response to ventricular pacing. In all subjects, ventricular pacing resulted in a prolongation of the activation recovery interval (a surrogate for action potential duration) in the region close to the site of pacemaker-induced activation from 228.4±7.6 ms during sinus rhythm to 328.3±6.2 ms during cardiac memory. As a consequence, increases are observed in both apical-basal and right-left ventricular gradients of repolarization, resulting in a significant increase in the dispersion of repolarization. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that electrical remodeling in response to ventricular pacing in human subjects results in action potential prolongation near the site of abnormal activation and a marked dispersion of repolarization. This dispersion of repolarization is potentially arrhythmogenic and, intriguingly, was less evident during continuous right ventricular pacing, suggesting the novel possibility that continuous right ventricular pacing at least partially suppresses pacemaker-induced cardiac memory.


Asunto(s)
Arritmias Cardíacas/terapia , Estimulación Cardíaca Artificial , Sistema de Conducción Cardíaco/fisiopatología , Ventrículos Cardíacos/fisiopatología , Marcapaso Artificial , Potenciales de Acción , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Análisis de Varianza , Arritmias Cardíacas/diagnóstico , Arritmias Cardíacas/fisiopatología , Electrocardiografía , Técnicas Electrofisiológicas Cardíacas , Diseño de Equipo , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Missouri , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Recuperación de la Función , Factores de Tiempo
8.
Mil Med ; 175(1): 72-3, 2010 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20108847

RESUMEN

A young adult male suffered a combat gunshot wound to his anterior trachea, which resulted in bullet migration, via aspiration, to the point of lodgment in the right upper lobe bronchus. He subsequently spontaneously expectorated the intact bullet, a first report of such events. A bronchoscopy was then performed confirming the site of entry, position of previous lodgment, and lack of further pathology. A brief discussion of expected findings, management, and complications are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Tos , Cuerpos Extraños , Tráquea/lesiones , Heridas por Arma de Fuego/complicaciones , Broncoscopía , Humanos , Inhalación , Masculino , Adulto Joven
9.
Am Fam Physician ; 80(9): 963-8; hand-out 970, 2009 Nov 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19873963

RESUMEN

Family physicians commonly care for older patients with disabilities. Many of these patients need help maintaining a therapeutic home environment to preserve their comfort and independence. Patients often have little time to decide how to address the limitations of newly-acquired disabilities. Physicians can provide patients with general recommendations in home modification after careful history and assessment. Universal design features, such as one-story living, no-step entries, and wide hallways and doors, are key adaptations for patients with physical disabilities. Home adaptations for patients with dementia include general safety measures such as grab bars and door alarms, and securing potentially hazardous items, such as cleaning supplies and medications. Improved lighting and color contrast, enlarged print materials, and vision aids can assist patients with limited vision. Patients with hearing impairments may benefit from interventions that provide supplemental visual and vibratory cues and alarms. Although funding sources are available, home modification is often a nonreimbursed expense. However, sufficient home modifications may allow the patient and caregivers to safely remain in the home without transitioning to a long-term care facility.


Asunto(s)
Accesibilidad Arquitectónica , Personas con Discapacidad/rehabilitación , Vivienda , Dispositivos de Autoayuda , Anciano , Humanos , Persona de Mediana Edad
11.
Cardiol J ; 16(3): 210-7, 2009.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19437394

RESUMEN

Methadone is increasingly prescribed for chronic pain, yet the associated mortality appears to be rising disproportionately relative to other opioid analgesics. We review the available evidence on methadone-associated mortality, and explore potential pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic explanations for its greater apparent lethality. While methadone shares properties of central nervous system and respiratory depression with other opioids, methadone is unique as a potent blocker of the delayed rectifier potassium ion channel (IKr). This results in QT-prolongation and torsade de pointes (TdP) in susceptible individuals. In some individuals with low serum protein binding of methadone, the extent of blockade is roughly comparable to that of sotalol, a potent QT-prolonging drug. Predicting an individual's propensity for methadone-induced TdP is difficult at present given the inherent limitations of the QT interval as a risk-stratifier combined with the multifactorial nature of the arrhythmia. Consensus recommendations have recently been published to mitigate the risk of TdP until further studies better define the arrhythmia risk factors for methadone. Studies are needed to provide insights into the clinical covariates most likely to result in methadone-associated arrhythmia and to assess the feasibility of current risk mitigation strategies.


Asunto(s)
Analgésicos Opioides/efectos adversos , Arritmias Cardíacas/inducido químicamente , Arritmias Cardíacas/mortalidad , Frecuencia Cardíaca/efectos de los fármacos , Metadona/efectos adversos , Dolor/tratamiento farmacológico , Bloqueadores de los Canales de Potasio/efectos adversos , Analgésicos Opioides/farmacocinética , Arritmias Cardíacas/fisiopatología , Enfermedad Crónica , Canales de Potasio de Tipo Rectificador Tardío/antagonistas & inhibidores , Canal de Potasio ERG1 , Canales de Potasio Éter-A-Go-Go/antagonistas & inhibidores , Humanos , Bloqueadores de los Canales de Potasio/farmacocinética , Guías de Práctica Clínica como Asunto , Unión Proteica , Medición de Riesgo , Torsades de Pointes/inducido químicamente , Torsades de Pointes/mortalidad , Torsades de Pointes/fisiopatología
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA
...