Diffusion Tensor Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance Imaging

2019 
Abstract Imaging the heart is central to cardiac phenotyping, but in clinical practice, this has been restricted to macroscopic interrogation. Diffusion tensor cardiovascular magnetic resonance (DT-CMR) is a novel, noninvasive technique that is beginning to unlock details of this microstructure in humans in vivo. DT-CMR demonstrates the helical cardiomyocyte arrangement that drives rotation and torsion. Sheetlets (functional units of cardiomyocytes, separated by shear layers) have been shown to reorientate between diastole and systole, revealing how microstructural function facilitates cardiac thickening. Measures of tissue diffusion can also be made: fractional anisotropy (a measure of myocyte organization) and mean diffusivity (a measure of myocyte packing). Abnormal myocyte orientation and sheetlet function has been demonstrated in congenital heart disease, cardiomyopathy, and after myocardial infarction. It is too early to predict the clinical importance of DT-CMR, but such unique in vivo information will likely prove valuable in early diagnosis and risk prediction of cardiac dysfunction and arrhythmias.
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