4.0 - Deformation Analysis Flashcards
(36 cards)
What is displacement?
Distance of movement (of the myocardium)
What is velocity?
Speed of movement (of the myocardium)
What is strain?
Change in length as a percentage.
Strain = (change in length) / (original length) x 100
What is strain rate?
Speed at which the strain occurs.
Average strain = strain / time
What does positive and negative strain indicate?
Positive = relaxation (lengthening)
Negative = contraction (shortening). Used to assess ventricular systolic function.
How is myocardial deformation assessed?
Regional LV function assessment:
- Measuring contractility (ability of LV regions to develop a force which causes muscle deformation (shorten or lengthen) and movement (velocity).
- Contractility is assessed by measuring the deformation and velocity.
Myocardial displacement is assessed with strain.
Myocardial velocity is assessed with TDI.
The contractility is dependent on the preload (the level of ventricular stretch, which is dependent on ventricular filling) and afterload (the force the heart works against to eject blood).
What is the coordinate system in myocardial deformation analysis?
Displacement or velocity or strain is measured via a coordinate system. The coordinate system axes are longitudinal (the long axis of the ventricle), radial (the short axis of the ventricle) and circumferential.
What is longitudinal strain?
Measures the change in length
What is circumferential strain?
Measures the change in circumference along the short axis of the heart
What is axial strain?
The movement in relation to the probe.
What is radial strain?
Measures the change in diameter.
How is longitudinal measured?
Longitudinal strain is measured using speckle echocardiography and assesses deformation, .
What is the equation for displacement?
Displacement = Velocity X Time
How is axial strain measured?
Axial strain is measured using TDI and assesses deformation, .
What is the definition of shear deformation?
The distortion of the heart when layers of the myocardium slide over each other due to the twisting and untwisting of the heart. Shear deformation, unlike strain, involves a change in the shape of the myocardium without a change in the volume.
What is the definition of shear strain?
The relative displacement, and the change in the angle, between the layers of the myocardium.
What is torsion?
The twisting of the heart, during systole, and untwisting, during diastole.
It causes shear stress within the layers of the myocardium. Torsion allows effective ejection and filling.
Torsion is the difference in rotation between the basal and apical, normalised to the distance between the base and the apex, measured in degrees/cm.
Normal LV torsion is 10-20°/cm.
LV torsion may be increased in HCM but may be decreased in HF.
How do the apex and the base rotate during systole and diastole?
Systole - heart twists due to the helical organisation of the myocardial fibres in the LV. Apex rotates clockwise and the base rotates anticlockwise whilst the mid-LV stays stationary. This is measured in degrees. LV twist is assessed by acquiring apical and basal short axis slices.
What is the myocardial velocity gradient and how is it calculated?
The rate of change in velocity within the myocardium.
It shows the difference in velocity between two positions in the myocardium over time.
MVG= ∆velocity/∆time
How is TDI derived strain calculated?
By using the velocities at two positions in the myocardium. Integrating the TDI derived strain rate over time results in the TDI derived strain.
How is TDI derived strain accuracy improved via controls?
Decrease sample size volume = increase spatial resolution = improves tracking which improves strain measurements.
Decrease the offset distance (the distance between the sample volume and the endocardium).
How is TDI derived strain accuracy improved via algorithms?
Spatial averaging and temporal averaging:
- Averaging of the velocity over space and time.
- This decreases noise to improve signal quality but removes potentially important variations in velocity, and therefore strain.
Sample volume tracking:
- Uses tracking algorithms (e.g. speckle tracking) to track the myocardium to improve the accuracy of strain measurements.
Drift compensation:
- Corrects for the shifts in the baseline during TDI acquisition via processing algorithms.
- Drift is the deviation in the baseline due to small tracking and alignment errors.
What are the limitations of TDI derived strain?
Angle dependence:
- The ability of the movement of other structures to affect the movement of the myocardium
- Segmental variation
- Poor image quality/endocardial definition
- Artefact
- Inter-operator variation
What are myocardial speckles and how are they created?
There is a set pattern of speckles within the myocardium. The visualisation of the speckles is increased by increasing the gain.
The light and dark areas within the myocardium are due to the interaction between the ultrasound and the structures. The structures cause the ultrasound to scatter. The ultrasound scatters interact with each other to cause areas of constructive interference (e.g. a peak of one wave interacting with a peak of another wave, causing a greater peak (or trough)), which causes bright speckles, and areas of destructive interference (a peak of one wave interacting with a trough of another wave, causing an area of zero amplitude), which causes dark speckles.