Conference proceeding
Subharmonic Aided Pressure Estimation in Patients with Suspected Portal HchastCypertension
2011 IEEE INTERNATIONAL ULTRASONICS SYMPOSIUM (IUS), pp 620-623
01 Jan 2011
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Abstract
Pressure measurements within the portal vein are clinically useful, but are currently estimated by the hepatic vein pressure gradient (HVPG), in which the pressure gradient is measured invasively using a wire pressure catheter. Alternatively, a noninvasive technique using subharmonic aided pressure estimation (SHAPE) may be useful for monitoring portal hypertension in patients. Portal pressure data was collected from 37 consenting patients undergoing transjugular liver biopsy as part of their clinical care. Within two hours post biopsy, patients received an infusion of Sonazoid (0.72 mu L microbubbles/kg/hour; GE Healthcare, Oslo, Norway) and saline (120 ml/hour). Five minutes into the infusion, subjects were scanned with a modified Logiq9 ultrasound scanner (GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, WI) with a 4C curvilinear probe. After determining the optimal acoustic pressure, radio frequency (RF) data was obtained from the portal and hepatic veins for 5 seconds in triplicate. Patients with a subharmonic gradient of less than -4 dB were removed, since such values correspond to physiological impossible pressure levels (attributed to a lack of contrast within the hepatic vein). Subharmonic gradients were compared to the corresponding patient's HVPG obtained during biopsy. The subharmonic gradient was in good overall agreement with the patients' HVPG (R=0.86). Patients normally requiring clinical intervention (HVPG > 12 mmHg) showed significantly higher subharmonic gradient between the two veins (1.93+/-1.49 vs. -1.42+/-1.55 dB, p=0.0001, for patients requiring intervention vs. those that did not), indicating that SHAPE may be a useful tool for the diagnosis of portal hypertension. Finally, the subharmonic gradient was in very strong agreement with HVPG measurements amongst the subpopulation requiring intervention (R=0.97), indicating that SHAPE may also be a good monitor of treatment response in patients with portal hypertension, albeit in a limited sample size.
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Details
- Title
- Subharmonic Aided Pressure Estimation in Patients with Suspected Portal HchastCypertension
- Creators
- John R. Eisenbrey - Thomas Jefferson UniversityJaydev K. Dave - Thomas Jefferson UniversityValgerdur G. Halldorsdottir - Thomas Jefferson UniversityDaniel A. Merton - Thomas Jefferson UniversityCynthia Miller - Thomas Jefferson UniversityJose M. Gonzalez - Thomas Jefferson UniversityPriscilla Machado - Thomas Jefferson UniversitySuhyun Park - GE Global ResearchScott Dianis - GE Global ResearchCarl L. Chalek - GE Global ResearchKai E. Thomenius - GE Global ResearchDaniel B. Brown - Thomas Jefferson UniversityVictor Navarro - Thomas Jefferson UniversityFlemming Forsberg - Thomas Jefferson UniversityIEEESungchul Park - Health Management and Policy
- Publication Details
- 2011 IEEE INTERNATIONAL ULTRASONICS SYMPOSIUM (IUS), pp 620-623
- Series
- IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium
- Publisher
- IEEE
- Number of pages
- 4
- Grant note
- GE Healthcare, Oslo, Norway; General Electric; GE Healthcare W81XWH-08-1-0503 303 / U.S. Army Medical Research Material Command; U.S. Army Medical Research & Materiel Command (USAMRMC) RC1 DK087365; R21 HL081892; R01 CA140338 / NIH; United States Department of Health & Human Services; National Institutes of Health (NIH) - USA
- Resource Type
- Conference proceeding
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- School of Biomedical Engineering, Science, and Health Systems; Health Management and Policy
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000309918400148
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-84865715491
- Other Identifier
- 991019173453404721
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