mrimaster

Cardiac MRI (Myocardial Viability scan) Protocols and Planning

Indications for cardiac MRI scan

For the assessment of heart failure

For the evaluation of ischaemic heart disease

For the assessment of cardiac masses

For the assessment of cardiomyopathies

For the assessment of valvular disease

For the assessment of congenital heart disease

For the assessment of aorta and great vessels diseases

For the assessment of myocardial infarction complications

Please check our new video tutorial for protocols and planning

Heart anatomy and physiology

The heart is a muscular pump that receives deoxygenated blood and propels oxygenated blood to various parts of the body. It is composed of four chambers: the right atrium, right ventricle, left atrium, and left ventricle.

Blood flow through the heart

On the right side, deoxygenated blood from the superior and inferior vena cava enters the atrium while it is relaxed. At the same time, oxygenated blood from the pulmonary veins empties into the relaxed left atrium. The two atria then contract, forcing the blood into their respective relaxed ventricles. On the right side, deoxygenated blood flows through the right atrioventricular (tricuspid) valve, and on the left side, oxygenated blood flows through the left atrioventricular (bicuspid/mitral) valve.

Next, the ventricles contract, and the valves close. From the right ventricle, deoxygenated blood is forced through the semilunar (pulmonary) valve into the pulmonary trunk, and from the left ventricle, oxygenated blood is forced through the semilunar (aortic) valve into the aorta.

Valves

There are 4 valves of the heart:

  1. The right atrioventricular valve/tricuspid valve separates the right atrium and right ventricle
  2. The left atrioventricular valve/mitral valve separates the left atrium and left ventricle
  3. The right semilunar/pulmonary valve lies between the right ventricle and pulmonary trunk
  4. The left semilunar/aortic valve lies between the left ventricle and the aorta

Structure and function of the valves

The right atrioventricular valve, also known as the tricuspid valve, consists of three cusps. Similarly, the left atrioventricular valve, referred to as the bicuspid valve or mitral valve, is composed of two cusps. These valves open when the ventricles relax and close when the ventricles contract, effectively preventing the backflow of blood into the atria. The cusps of these valves always point into the ventricles, with their free edges attached to fibrous strands called chordae tendineae. These chordae tendineae, in turn, are connected to papillary muscles on the ventricular wall.

The semilunar valves are made up of three cusps each and serve the purpose of halting the blood from flowing back into the ventricles after a ventricular contraction. Positioned at the center of each valve is a fibrous nodule, and in the presence of increased back pressure, the cusps balloon outwards, causing their opposing surfaces to press together, effectively preventing any backflow.

Pericardium

The pericardium is a double walled sac that contains the heart and the roots of the great vessels. The pericardium is composed of three layers:

  1. Fibrous pericardium is the outer layer which attaches to the diaphragm, vena cava, aorta and sternum
  2. Parietal pericardium is the middle serous layer
  3. Visceral pericardium forms the outer layer of the heart, the epicardium
  4. The pericardial cavity lies between the parietal and visceral pericardium and contains serous fluid which acts to prevent friction during movements of the heart.

Layers of the heart

The heart is composed of three layers:

  1. Epicardium is the outer layer of the heart formed by the visceral pericardium
  2. Myocardium is the middle layer composed of cardiac muscle
  3. Endocardium is the inner layer composed of simple squamous epithelium

Blood supply to the heart

The coronary arteries supply the myocardium and epicardium of the heart. The right and left coronary arteries arise from the ascending aorta.

The right coronary artery originates from the right aortic sinus and gives off two major branches. The marginal branch supplies blood to the right ventricle and atrium, while the posterior interventricular branch supplies blood to both ventricles.

The left coronary artery arises from the left aortic sinus and also gives off two significant branches. The anterior interventricular branch supplies blood to the walls of the ventricles, and the circumflex branch supplies blood to the left ventricle and atrium.

Venous drainage of the heart

Deoxygenated blood, which has supplied the heart itself, is carried by the cardiac veins. These veins follow a similar pathway to the coronary arteries. The four main cardiac veins are the great cardiac vein, anterior cardiac vein, middle cardiac vein, and posterior cardiac vein. These veins drain into the coronary sinus, which is the primary vein of the heart. The coronary sinus runs in the posterior atrioventricular groove and then opens into the right atrium.

Innervation of the heart

The sinoatrial (SA) node generates an electrical impulse that passes through the atrial musculature on both sides, causing them to contract. Atrial contraction leads to the discharge of blood into the relaxed ventricles. The electrical impulses eventually reach the atrioventricular (AV) node, situated in the interatrial septal region. From the AV node, these impulses travel onward through the atrioventricular bundle (bundle of His) and arrive at the interventricular septum. In the interventricular septum, the bundle divides into right and left bundle branches, which pass to their respective ventricles and send out many branches called Purkinje fibers. These Purkinje fibers carry and spread the electrical impulses, eventually causing the ventricles to contract.

Heart anatomy

Cardiac MRI techniques

The most common challenge of cardiac MRI image acquisition is overcoming motion artifacts. Motion artifacts arising from the heart and lungs occur due to the cardiac cycle and the respiratory cycle. Respiratory motion can be eliminated by breath-holding or the respiratory navigator technique. Artifacts from cardiac motion, however, can only be eliminated by ECG gating. ECG gating acquires data during diastole when the heart is at rest.

Respiratory artefact reduction

The most commonly used techniques for eliminating respiratory artifacts are breath holding and respiratory navigation.

Breath holding technique

Cardiac scans are typically performed during expiration. This is because, during inspiration, there is an increased tendency for the diaphragm to move, leading to changes in anatomical positioning. Therefore, it is crucial to provide proper coaching to patients before placing them into the scanner.

  1. Instruct the patient to breathe in, but not too deeply.
  2. Instruct the patient to breathe out and then to stop breathing.
  3. Ask the patient to breathe normally after the scan (usually for under 20 minutes).

It is important that the patient inhales and exhales approximately the same amount of air during each breath-hold, as the position of the diaphragm is a crucial factor in ensuring reproducibility of anatomical positioning.

Navigator technique

The Navigator technique is used for patients who are unable to hold their breath. During free breathing, the motion of the diaphragm changes the position of the heart, greater vessels, and liver, leading to inconsistent image quality. This inconsistency arises because the same anatomical position is not identified for each sampled k-space point. A navigator consists of an intermittent two-dimensional pulse that excites a cylinder of spins, followed by a readout gradient in the direction of the long axis of the cylinder, acquiring a 1-dimensional profile of the area of interest.

The sequence utilizes a low flip angle (10) to minimize saturation. The abrupt change in signal intensity of the lungs and liver along the axis of the box is utilized to determine the diaphragm’s position. The navigator pulse lasts about 20ms and is executed every 200ms. A scan acceptance window is calculated from the preliminary pre-scan data, after which the actual scan acquisition commences.

The navigation box detects the diaphragm’s position during each slice acquisition, allowing imaging only when the diaphragm falls within the acceptance window.

ECG gating

Artifacts from cardiac motion can be suppressed using ECG (electrocardiographic) gating/triggering, where image acquisition is synchronized with the cardiac rhythm. This can be done with either prospective or retrospective triggering.

Prospective Triggering

This technique is most commonly used for single-slice or multi-slice single-phase cardiac imaging. Prospective triggering avoids cardiac motion artifacts by acquiring images when the heart is at rest during mid-diastole. Image acquisition is triggered after the R-peak and subsequently at the same stage in each R-R interval. Data acquired at phases other than the cardiac rest period may be degraded by motion artifacts.

Prospective Triggering mri cardiac

Retrospective Triggering

This method involves the continuous acquisition of data to produce images from all phases of the cardiac cycle in order to construct a cine movie. Images of myocardial contraction and relaxation can be used to detect myocardial dysfunction and perform cardiac chamber quantification.

In retrospective triggering, R-peaks are automatically detected, and data is acquired over an entire R-R interval for each specific K-profile. This process is repeated until all K-profiles are acquired. ECG data and acquisition timings are then matched during reconstruction to create images of all cardiac phases and assemble the cine scan.

Retrospective Triggering

Triggering parameters

Cardiac MRI technique

This interval is measured from one QRS complex peak to the next peak on an ECG scan. The number of slices that can be acquired in a single package depends on the RR interval. If more slices are required, the sequence can be acquired in two packages (i.e., 2 RR intervals).

Cardiac Frequency

The delay from detection of the R-peak to start of acquisition.

Trigger Delay

Cardiac scans are normally performed during expiration. This is because during inspiration, there is an increased tendency for the diaphragm to move, causing changes in anatomical positioning. Therefore, it is very important to provide proper coaching to the patients before placing them into the scanner.

RR Window

The RR window sets acceptable lower and upper limits for the RR-interval and determines the permitted percentage variation in the interval length. The lower limit of the RR-interval determines the fastest accepted heart rate, while the upper limit determines the slowest accepted rate. For example, with an RR window of 10 and 15, an acceptable RR interval ranges from 90% (110 minus 10%) to 115% (110 plus 15%)

Arrhythmia Rejection

Useful in cases of patients with marked cardiac arrhythmia. Data acquired outside the permitted R-R window is rejected. In prospective triggering, arrhythmia rejection skips two R-R intervals (i.e., one R-R interval after the irregular beat). The system then resumes data acquisition after the next R-peak.

Positioning the MRI electrodes in a Philips and GE scanner

The wireless VCG sensor has dual lead VCG monitoring capabilities based on
4 electrodes:

Connect the green, white, red and black leads to the VCG electrodes as shown in the diagram. 

Philips VCG electrode positioning mri

Positioning the electrodes in a Siemens scanner

The wireless ECG sensor has a monitoring capability based on 3 electrodes:

Connect the white, green, red and black leads to the ECG electrodes as shown in the diagram. 

Cardiac-MRI-siemens-electrode-positioning

Warnings

Do not use the ECG signal for patient monitoring or diagnostic purposes.

Electrocardiograms acquired in the MR environment are useful only for cardiac triggered imaging. Such ECGs are NOT suitable for patient monitoring as the ECG signal is distorted when the patient is inside the magnet. ECG uses electrical measurements which can be corrupted by interference with electromagnetic fields and by magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) effects.

Only use MR safe ECG electrodes.

Non MRI-safe ECG electrodes can cause severe skin burns.

Ensure proper ECG skin contact

A skin burn may develop if electrodes are not in complete contact with the skin. Ensure there are no air gaps and excess hair has been removed.

Do not use expired ECG electrodes.

Old electrodes can be dried out causing insufficient skin contact.

Do not reposition or reuse ECG electrodes.

Repositioning or the reuse of ECG electrodes may result in a heating effect due to worn down surfaces. Always use new electrodes.

Do not use paediatric ECG electrodes on adults and vice versa.

This may result in skin burns.

Do not place the ECG battery module directly on the patient’s skin.

This may result in skin burns.

Do not place the battery module close to the imaging volume.

Placing the battery close to the heart can lead to image artefacts and distortion

Contraindications

Patient preparation for cardiac MRI

Positioning for Cardiac MRI

Cardiac (heart) MRI positioning

Recommended Cardiac MRI Protocols, Parameters, and Planning

MRI Localiser

An initial three-plane SSFP (TrueFISP, B-FFE, or FIESTA) localizer scan is required for localization and sequence planning. These fast single-shot localizers have an acquisition time of under 25 seconds, making them excellent for localizing chest structures.

cardiac mri localiser

Cardiac MRI planning localiser

Plan the axial localizer on the coronal plane and position the block across the chest as shown. The slices must cover the entire heart from the aortic arch to the diaphragm (usually 3-4 slices). Check the position in the other two planes.

Plan the sagittal localizer on the coronal plane and position the block parallel to the chest as demonstrated. The slices should encompass the entire heart from right to left (usually 3-4 slices). Verify the position in the other two planes.

Plan the coronal localizer on the axial plane and position the block across the chest as indicated. The slices must encompass the entire heart from the sternum to the thoracic aorta (usually 3-4 slices). Confirm the position in the other two planes.

All three blocks must be ISO-centered within the magnetic bore to avoid any inhomogeneity artifacts. These localizers are performed using a combination of ECG gating and breath-holding. Scans should be conducted during an expiratory breath-hold with an ECG trigger for every heartbeat (In our department, we instruct patients to take two breaths in and out before giving the “breathe out and hold” instruction).

cardiac mri protocols and planning of localizer

Chest Dark or bight blood axial

Plan the axial T2 scans on the coronal localizer. Plan the planning block straight across the chest, as shown. Verify the positioning in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be established in the sagittal plane (perpendicular to the thoracic spine). The number of slices should be sufficient to cover the heart from the aortic arch to the apex (usually 18-20 slices). These axial slices are acquired using a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be performed under expiratory breath-holds, with ECG triggers set for every second heartbeat. Axial bright blood scans involve a multiple breath-hold technique that acquires 8-10 slices with each breath hold. In our department, the cardiologist prefers conducting bright blood axials.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of axial dark blood

What are Dark Blood Sequences?

Dark blood sequences involve the use of a double preparation pulse. The signal from both blood and myocardium, both inside and outside the slice area, is inverted using the first pulse. Subsequently, a second pulse, known as a reinversion pulse, affects the signal within the measurement slice exclusively. As blood with an inverted signal flows into the measurement slice during data acquisition, it appears dark. To achieve this effect, data acquisition must be carried out during diastole. It is crucial for the reinversion and data acquisition to occur in the same position within the heart, ensuring successful reinversion of the tissues in the slice.

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol dark blood axi haste

Two chamber localiser

Plan the 2-chamber localizer on the axial plane and angle the planning block parallel to the interventricular septum. Move the position block to the center of the left ventricle, aligning it with the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex. (Note: In most patients, these structures may not be visible in the same image; scroll through the axial images to identify both structures.) Verify the position in the other two planes. Provide an appropriate angle in the sagittal plane to maintain parallel alignment with the interventricular septum. This single-slice (non-cine) 2-chamber localizer is performed using a combination of ECG gating and breath-holding. Scans should be conducted during expiration breath-holds with an ECG trigger set for every heartbeat.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of two chamber localizer

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 2ch localizer

Short axis localiser

Plan the short-axis localizer using the 2-chamber view as a reference, and orient the planning block perpendicular to the line running along the center of the mitral valve and the left ventricular apex, essentially perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle. Confirm the positioning in the other two planes as well. Provide an appropriate angle for the axial plane, which is perpendicular to the interventricular septum. Acquire slices that adequately cover the heart from the middle of the left atrium to the left ventricular apex; typically, 8-10 slices are needed. This multi-slice, non-cine short-axis localizer is conducted using a combination of ECG gating and breath-holding. Perform scans during expiration with breath-holding, triggering the ECG with each heartbeat.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of short axis localizer

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol short axis localizer (2)

Four chamber view localiser

Plan the 4-chamber localizer scan using the 2-chamber localizer image as a reference. Angle the planning block parallel to the line running along the center of the mitral valve and the left ventricular apex. Verify the position in the other two planes. Ensure an appropriate angle is set for the short-axis localizer, aligning it parallel to the line along the right ventricular apex and the left anterolateral papillary muscle. While planning in the short-axis localizer, take care to avoid the aorta in the resulting 4-chamber view (refer to the planning diagram for accurate guidance). This single-slice, non-cine 4-chamber localizer is conducted using a combination of ECG gating and breath-holding. Perform scans during expiration breath-holds with ECG triggering for every heartbeat.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of four chamber localizer

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch localizer

LEFT VENTRICULAR (LV) FUNCTION

Cardiac MRI Left two chamber cine

Plan the 2-chamber cine sequence on the 4-chamber localizer and align the planning block parallel to the interventricular septum. Move the position block to the center of the left ventricle, parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and the left ventricular apex. Check the position in the other two planes. Ensure an appropriate angle is set in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the interventricular septum). This retrospective 2-chamber cine scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be conducted under expiratory breath-hold.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of two chamber cine

What are cine Sequences?

Cine sequences are employed to assess cardiac function. During cine acquisition, multiple individual images are captured at various phases of the cardiac cycle. These images are then played as a video, providing users with a visual representation of cardiac activity. TrueFISP sequences are strongly recommended for cine imaging due to their high temporal and spatial resolution, as well as improved blood-tissue contrast. In cardiac cine imaging, TrueFISP is combined with i-pat technology to reduce acquisition time.

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 2ch cine

Cardiac MRI Four chamber cine

Plan the 4-chamber cine on the 2-chamber localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the line along the right ventricular apex and anterolateral papillary muscle).

While planning in the short-axis localizer, care should be taken to avoid the aorta in the resulting 4-chamber view (please refer to the planning diagram for appropriate guidance). This retrospective 4-chamber cine scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be conducted under expiratory breath-holds.

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch cine

Cardiac MRI Short axis cine

Plan the short-axis cine scans on the two-chamber cine view and angle the planning block perpendicular to the line along the center of the mitral valve and the left ventricular apex (i.e., perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle). Check the positioning in the other two planes as well. An appropriate angle must be chosen for the four-chamber cine view (perpendicular to the interventricular septum). The slices should be sufficient to cover the heart from the mitral valve to the left ventricular apex (usually 11-15 slices). These multi-slice retrospective short-axis cine scans are performed using a combination of ECG gating and multiple breath-holds. The scans should be conducted during expiration breath-holds, with one slice acquired during each breath-hold. Short axis cine scans must be planned on the end- diastole (maximum ventricular expansion) slice on 2chamber and 4 chamber cine.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of short axis cine

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol short axis cine

Three chamber (Left Ventricular Outflow Tract LVOT)cine

Plan the 3-chamber cine on the short-axis localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the line along the center of the aortic valve and the left ventricle (i.e., perpendicular to the posterolateral left ventricle wall). Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the 2-chamber localizer (parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and the left ventricular apex). This retrospective 3-chamber cine scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-hold.

Note:-If your scanner has a perpendicular function available, simply perform the planning in a single plane (short axis) and utilize the perpendicular function to automatically generate the planning in the other planes.
cardiac mri protocols and planning of three chamber cine

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch cine

Left Ventricular Outflow Tract coronal cine

Plan the Left Ventricular Outflow Tract coronal cine using the 3-chamber cine images. Angle the planning block parallel to the line along the center of the aortic valve and ascending aorta. The LVOT coronal scan is usually planned only in the 3-chamber view. If the manufacturer has a ‘perpendicular’ function in the planning tab, please use it to achieve more accurate planning. This retrospective Left Ventricular Outflow Tract coronal cine scan is performed using a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-hold

Note:-If your scanner has the perpendicular function available, you can simply perform the planning in a single plane (short axis) and utilize the perpendicular function to automatically generate the planning in other planes. Alternatively, if the perpendicular function is not available, planning in a single plane should still suffice to obtain an appropriate view of the aortic outflow.
left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) CARDIAC MRI PLANNING

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch cine

Aortic valve cine

Plan the aortic valve axial cine using the 3-chamber cine images as a reference. Angle the planning block parallel to the aortic annulus. Verify the position in the left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) coronal cine. Ensure an appropriate angle is applied in the LVOT coronal cine, parallel to the aortic annulus. Utilize three slices to ensure comprehensive coverage of the aortic valve throughout the various phases of the cardiac cycle. This retrospective 3-chamber cine scan is conducted with a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Perform scans during expiration breath-holds for optimal results.

aortic valve cardiac mri planning

Right two chamber localiser

Plan the right 2-chamber localizer on the 4-chamber localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the interventricular septum. Move the position block to the center of the right ventricle, parallel to the line along the center of the tricuspid valve, right atrium, and right ventricle. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the line bisecting the pulmonary valve and right atrium). This 2-chamber localizer scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be performed under expiratory breath-hold.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of right two chamber cine

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch cine

Right Ventricular Outflow Tract cine (RVOT)

Plan the Right Ventricular Outflow Tract cine on the axial bright blood images. Angle the planning block parallel to the line bisecting the pulmonary trunk, pulmonary valves, and right atrium. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the 2-chamber localizer (parallel to the line bisecting the pulmonary outflow tract and pulmonary valves). This retrospective Right Ventricular Outflow Tract coronal cine scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-hold.

right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) cardiac MRI planning image

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch cine

Right Ventricular Outflow Tract cine 3-point planning (optional)

Three-point planning is a software option made available by certain manufacturers. Three-point planning employs three distinct points in curved anatomy to achieve more accurate planning. The planning block will automatically align parallel to the designated points. Plan the cine for the Right Ventricular Outflow Tract on the axial bright blood images. Utilize the 3-point planner to establish the first point in the right atrium, the second point in the mid pulmonary trunk, and the third point at the pulmonary artery bifurcation. The planning block will then automatically align parallel to the right ventricular outflow tract. This retrospective coronal cine scan of the Right Ventricular Outflow Tract is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted while maintaining an expiration breath-hold.

Right ventricular outflow tract (RVOT) 3 point cardiac MRI planning image

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol 4ch cine

Post contrast cardiac imaging

Immediate post-contrast imaging is mainly performed for the diagnosis of blood clots and cardiac tumors. Scans are acquired using a Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) sequence with a TI value of 450.

Post contrast PSIR(TI 450) two chamber view planning

Plan the 2-chamber post-contrast Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) scans on the 4-chamber localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the interventricular septum. Move the position block to the center of the left ventricle, parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the interventricular septum). This single-slice 2-chamber post-contrast PSIR scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-hold with an ECG trigger on every second heartbeat

cardiac mri protocols and planning of two chamber post gd

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol post gd psir

Post GD PSIR (TI 450) four chamber view planning

Plan the 4-chamber post-contrast Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) scans on the 2-chamber localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the line along the right ventricular apex and anterolateral papillary muscle). While planning in the short-axis localizer, care should be taken to avoid the aorta in the resulting 4-chamber view (please refer to the planning diagram for appropriate guidance). This single-slice 4-chamber post-contrast PSIR scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted under expiration and breath-hold with an ECG trigger on every second heartbeat.

cardiac mri planning 4 chamber post contrast

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol post gd psir

Post GD PSIR (TI 450) three chamber view planning

Plan the 3-chamber post-contrast Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) on the short-axis localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the line along the center of the aortic valve and left ventricle (i.e., perpendicular to the posterolateral left ventricle wall). Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the 2-chamber localizer (parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex). This retrospective 3-chamber cine scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-hold.

cardiac mri protocols and planning of three chamber post gd

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol post gd psir (1)

DELAYED SCANS (8-10 MINUTES POST GADOLINIUM)

Look locker (TI scout)

This TI scout consists of a centrically ordered, segmented K-space inversion recovery gradient echo pulse sequence obtained over 2-3 heartbeats. Each segment corresponds to a different TI value. The aim is to determine the optimal TI value to nullify the signal from normal myocardium. Images are usually acquired with TI values ranging from 185 to 515 ms and are visually assessed by radiographers. These optimal TI values are then used for the subsequent delayed scans. In images with an optimal TI value, the signal intensity of normal myocardium will be nearly null, and the signal intensity of the left ventricular cavity will be lower than that of the infarcted region. Incorrect selection of the optimal null time can result in lower contrast and may reduce the visibility of the hyper-enhanced area, leading to an underestimation of the extent of infarction.

TI scout image

Look locker (TI scout) planning

Plan the Look-Locker axial sequence on the 4-chamber localizer. Angle the planning block perpendicular to the interventricular septum and move the position block to the middle of the ventricles. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the 2-chamber localizer (perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle). This turbo field echo planar imaging (EPI) is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-holds. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-holds with an ECG trigger on every second heartbeat (In our department, we instruct the patients to breathe in and out twice before the “breathe out and hold” instruction). This TI scout is acquired under a single breath-hold.

Cardiac look locker planning

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol TI scout

Phase sensitive inversion recovery (PSIR) scans

The PSIR Sequence is a 2D single-shot steady-state free precession (SSFP) image with phase-sensitive inversion recovery preparation. An appropriate TI value, chosen from the look locker, should be used to nullify the normal myocardium (usually 250-330 ms). This sequence provides both magnitude and real images.

Gadolinium washes in and out of the normal myocardium in a matter of minutes. Contrast normally accumulates in the extracellular space and will collect in areas of infarct with fibrous tissue. Inflammation or infiltration in the myocardium with accompanying edema will also be visualized as contrast collects in this extracellular space. The areas of delayed enhancement in the image indicate infarction or inflammation.

Delayed PSIR two chamber view planning

Plan the 2-chamber Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) scans on the 4-chamber localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the interventricular septum. Move the position block to the center of the left ventricle, parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the interventricular septum). This single-slice 2-chamber PSIR scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be performed under expiration breath-hold with an ECG trigger on every second heartbeat.

Note:-Please ensure that you have entered the optimal TI value into the TI box on the parameter card. Additionally, remember to capture the cardiac cycle within the cardiac gating section.
cardiac mri planning psir 2ch

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol post gd psir 2ch

Delayed PSIR four chamber view planning

Plan the 4-chamber Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) scans on the 2-chamber localizer and angle the planning block parallel to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex. Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the short-axis localizer (parallel to the line along the right ventricular apex and anterolateral papillary muscle). While planning in the short-axis localizer, care should be taken to avoid the aorta in the resulting 4-chamber view (please refer to the planning diagram for appropriate guidance). This single-slice 4-chamber PSIR scan is performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted under expiration breath-hold with an ECG trigger on every second heartbeat.

cardiac mri planning psir 4ch

Delayed PSIR short axis view planning

Plan the short-axis Phase-Sensitive Inversion Recovery (PSIR) scans on the 2-chamber cine and angle the planning block perpendicular to the line along the center of the mitral valve and left ventricular apex (i.e., perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle). Check the position in the other two planes. An appropriate angle must be given in the four-chamber cine (perpendicular to the interventricular septum). Slices must be sufficient to cover the heart from the mitral valve to the left ventricular apex (usually 8-12 slices). These multi-slice short-axis PSIR scans are performed with a combination of ECG gating and breath-hold. Scans should be conducted under an expiration breath-hold with an ECG trigger on every second heartbeat. Short-axis cine scans must be planned on the end-diastole (maximum ventricular expansion) slice on the 2-chamber and 4-chamber cine.

Note:-P Please ensure that you've entered the optimal TI value into the TI box on the parameter card. Additionally, remember to capture the cardiac cycle within the cardiac gating section. Also, double-check that you've copied the number of slices and slice thickness from the dynamic short-axis scans. These steps are mandatory for the radiologist to compare the dynamic sequences with the post-contrast sequences.
cardiac mri protocols and planning of short axis psir

Recommended Protocol

cardiac mri protocol post gd psir 2ch

ARRHYTHMIA AND CARDIAC IMAGING

Arrhythmia is a disturbance of the heart’s usual rhythm. In patients with arrhythmia, the heart beats too quickly, too slowly, or with an irregular pattern.

The main types of arrhythmia are:

  1. Atrial fibrillation (AF): The most common type of arrhythmia where the heart beats irregularly and faster than normal.

  2. Supraventricular tachycardia: The heart beats faster than normal, usually between 140 and 240 beats per minute.

  3. Bradycardia: The heart beats more slowly than normal.

  4. Heart block: This occurs when the electrical impulses are blocked between the atria and the ventricles, causing the heart to beat more slowly than normal.

  5. Sick sinus syndrome: This condition usually occurs due to damage to the SA node. In this type of arrhythmia, the heart beats slowly or misses a few beats.

  6. Ventricular fibrillation: This type of arrhythmia occurs when the heart’s electrical activity becomes disordered, causing a rare, rapid, and disorganized cardiac rhythm.

Arrhythmia correction in cardiac imaging

Arrhythmia correction is a method that enables the MRI system to reject unwanted data, achieving high-quality scans in patients with an irregular heart rhythm. Arrhythmia correction allows the technologist to enter the expected average RR interval and tolerance range into the system. During data acquisition, if an R-peak is not within the RR window, the acquired data will be rejected. The system will wait until the next R-peak occurs.

Arrhythmia correction cardiac MRI