학술논문

Parasternal Versus Apical View in Cardiac Natural Mechanical Wave Speed Measurements
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control IEEE Trans. Ultrason., Ferroelect., Freq. Contr. Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control, IEEE Transactions on. 67(8):1590-1602 Aug, 2020
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Atmospheric measurements
Particle measurements
Motion measurement
Myocardium
Valves
Ultrasonic variables measurement
Heart
Aortic valve closure (AVC)
lamb waves
myocardial stiffness
shear wave (SW) elastography
ultrasonic imaging
Language
ISSN
0885-3010
1525-8955
Abstract
Shear wave speed measurements can potentially be used to noninvasively measure myocardial stiffness to assess the myocardial function. Several studies showed the feasibility of tracking natural mechanical waves induced by aortic valve closure in the interventricular septum, but different echocardiographic views have been used. This article systematically studied the wave propagation speeds measured in a parasternal long-axis and in an apical four-chamber view in ten healthy volunteers. The apical and parasternal views are predominantly sensitive to longitudinal or transversal tissue motion, respectively, and could, therefore, theoretically measure the speed of different wave modes. We found higher propagation speeds in apical than in the parasternal view (median of 5.1 m/s versus 3.8 m/s, ${p} < {0.01}$ , ${n} = {9}$ ). The results in the different views were not correlated ( ${r} = {0.26}$ , ${p} = {0.49}$ ) and an unexpectedly large variability among healthy volunteers was found in apical view compared with the parasternal view (3.5–8.7 versus 3.2–4.3 m/s, respectively). Complementary finite element simulations of Lamb waves in an elastic plate showed that different propagation speeds can be measured for different particle motion components when different wave modes are induced simultaneously. The in vivo results cannot be fully explained with the theory of Lamb wave modes. Nonetheless, the results suggest that the parasternal long-axis view is a more suitable candidate for clinical diagnosis due to the lower variability in wave speeds.