Cine magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is a new, rapid MR pulse sequence that acquires up to 32 images per cardiac cycle at up to four levels of the heart within 4 minutes. In this study, the whole heart was encompassed by contiguous 10-mm transverse sections. Ventricular volumes were calculated by adding luminal areas determined in each section at end-diastole and end-systole. The left ventricular volume index was 57 ml/m2 +/- 9 at end-diastole and 17 ml/m2 +/- 4 at end-systole. The right ventricular volume index was 63 ml/m2 +/- 9 at end-diastole and 22 ml/m2 +/- 6 at end-systole. The left to right ventricular stroke volume ratio was 0.97 +/- 0.06, which was not statistically different from the theoretically expected ratio of 1. Interobserver and intraobserver measurements were closely correlated. Volume measurements were validated with two-dimensional echocardiography in five volunteers. Cine MR imaging allows reproducible three-dimensional measurement of right and left ventricular volumes with short imaging time and good temporal resolution.
A new, rapid magnetic resonance (MR) imaging method, cine MR imaging, was used to determine the regurgitant fraction (RF) in patients with left-sided regurgitant lesions. Right and left ventricular stroke volumes were determined with cine MR imaging and a modified Simpson formula in ten healthy volunteers and 23 patients known to have either predominant mitral (n = 17) or aortic (n = 6) regurgitation. RFs evaluated at cine MR imaging were compared in healthy persons and patients with mild, moderate, or severe regurgitation demonstrated at angiography (n = 10) and Doppler echocardiography (n = 13). Cine MR imaging depicted regurgitant blood flow in all 29 regurgitant lesions in 23 patients as areas of low signal intensity within the regurgitant chamber. The RF was 4% +/- 7% in healthy subjects and 12% +/- 12% in those with mild, 35% +/- 14% in those with moderate, and 63% +/- 5% in those with severe regurgitation. The RFs determined by two observers were similar.
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