RESUMO
OBJECTIVE: As the global burden of cardiovascular disease increases, proactive cardiovascular healthcare by means of accurate, precise, continuous, and non-invasive monitoring is becoming crucial. However, no current device is able to provide cardiac hemodynamic monitoring with the aforementioned criterion. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) is an inexpensive, non-invasive imaging modality that can provide real-time images of internal conductivity distributions that describe physiological activity. This work explores and compares a standard approach of regular cardiac gated averaging (RCGA) and a newly developed method, cardiac eigen-imaging (CEI), based on the singular value decomposition (SVD) to isolate cardiac activity in thoracic EIT. APPROACH: EIT and heart-rate (HR) data were collected from 20 heart-failure patients preceding echocardiography. Features from RCGA and CEI images were correlated with stroke volume (SV) from echocardiography and image reconstruction parameters were optimized using leave-one-out (LOO) cross-validation. MAIN RESULTS: CEI per-pixel-based features achieved a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.80 with SV relative to 0.72 with RCGA. CEI had 33 high-correlating pixels while RCGA had 8. High-correlating pixels tend to concentrate in the right-ventricle (RV) when referenced to a general chest model. SIGNIFICANCE: While both RCGA and CEI images had high-correlating pixels, CEI had higher correlations, a larger number of high-correlating pixels, and unlike RCGA is not dependent on the quality of the HR data collected. The observed performance of the CEI approach represents a promising step forward for EIT-based cardiac monitoring in either clinical or ambulatory settings.
Assuntos
Impedância Elétrica , Coração/diagnóstico por imagem , Coração/fisiologia , Tomografia , Ecocardiografia , Insuficiência Cardíaca/diagnóstico por imagem , Frequência Cardíaca , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Volume Sistólico , TóraxRESUMO
Many patients with severe mitral regurgitation cannot undergo conventional mitral valve surgery due to prohibitive surgical risk and are candidates for transcatheter repair with an edge-to-edge technique. Prior reports suggest efficacy with this approach for mitral regurgitation due to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with left ventricular outflow obstruction. We present a case report of transcatheter mitral valve repair for posterior leaflet prolapse with concomitant left ventricular outflow tract obstruction due to systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve in the absence of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.