328 research outputs found
Применение метода аналитических сетей для оптимизации процесса выбора стратегии развития пассажирского автотранспортного предприятия
В статье обозначена проблема снижения рентабельности пассажирских автотранспортных предприятий и связанные с этим сложности по реализации процедуры стратегического прогнозирования и управления предприятием. Обосновано использование метода аналитических сетей в модели поддержки принятия решений при управлении стратегией автотранспортного предприятия, представленной в работе [1], в качестве инструмента, позволяющего формализовать экспертные знания на основных этапах оценки и выбора проектов стратегического развития. Описаны основные шаги и приведены результаты расчета алгоритма метода аналитических сетей в рамках данной модели.The article outlines the problem of reducing the profitability of passenger motor transport enterprises and the associated difficulties in implementing the procedure of strategic forecasting and enterprise management. The use of the method of analytical networks in the model of decision support in managing the strategy of a trucking enterprise presented in [1] is substantiated as a tool that allows to formalize expert knowledge at the main stages of evaluation and selection of projects for strategic development. The main steps and calculations of the algorithm algorithm for analytical networks within the framework of this model are described
Use of T2 maps for rapid prediction of stress effectiveness before the injection of contrast in myocardial perfusion studies at 3.0T
Shortened Modified Look-Locker Inversion recovery (ShMOLLI) for clinical myocardial T1-mapping at 1.5 and 3 T within a 9 heartbeat breathhold
Background
T1 mapping allows direct in-vivo quantitation of microscopic changes in the myocardium, providing new diagnostic insights into cardiac disease. Existing methods require long breath holds that are demanding for many cardiac patients. In this work we propose and validate a novel, clinically applicable, pulse sequence for myocardial T1-mapping that is compatible with typical limits for end-expiration breath-holding in patients.
Materials and methods
The Shortened MOdified Look-Locker Inversion recovery (ShMOLLI) method uses sequential inversion recovery measurements within a single short breath-hold. Full recovery of the longitudinal magnetisation between sequential inversion pulses is not achieved, but conditional interpretation of samples for reconstruction of T1-maps is used to yield accurate measurements, and this algorithm is implemented directly on the scanner. We performed computer simulations for 100 ms<T1 < 2.7 s and heart rates 40-100 bpm followed by phantom validation at 1.5T and 3T. In-vivo myocardial T1-mapping using this method and the previous gold-standard (MOLLI) was performed in 10 healthy volunteers at 1.5T and 3T, 4 volunteers with contrast injection at 1.5T, and 4 patients with recent myocardial infarction (MI) at 3T.
Results
We found good agreement between the average ShMOLLI and MOLLI estimates for T1 < 1200 ms. In contrast to the original method, ShMOLLI showed no dependence on heart rates for long T1 values, with estimates characterized by a constant 4% underestimation for T1 = 800-2700 ms. In-vivo, ShMOLLI measurements required 9.0 ± 1.1 s (MOLLI = 17.6 ± 2.9 s). Average healthy myocardial T1 s by ShMOLLI at 1.5T were 966 ± 48 ms (mean ± SD) and 1166 ± 60 ms at 3T. In MI patients, the T1 in unaffected myocardium (1216 ± 42 ms) was similar to controls at 3T. Ischemically injured myocardium showed increased T1 = 1432 ± 33 ms (p < 0.001). The difference between MI and remote myocardium was estimated 15% larger by ShMOLLI than MOLLI (p < 0.04) which suffers from heart rate dependencies for long T1. The in-vivo variability within ShMOLLI T1-maps was only 14% (1.5T) or 18% (3T) higher than the MOLLI maps, but the MOLLI acquisitions were twice longer than ShMOLLI acquisitions.
Conclusion
ShMOLLI is an efficient method that generates immediate, high-resolution myocardial T1-maps in a short breath-hold with high precision. This technique provides a valuable clinically applicable tool for myocardial tissue characterisation
Myocardial extracellular volume imaging by CMR quantitatively characterizes myocardial infarction and subclinical myocardial fibrosis
a cardiovascular magnetic resonance study
Background The hypertensive deoxy-corticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt-treated
pig (hereafter, DOCA pig) was recently introduced as large animal model for
early-stage heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The aim of
the present study was to evaluate cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) of
DOCA pigs and weight-matched control pigs to characterize ventricular, atrial
and myocardial structure and function of this phenotype model. Methods Five
anesthetized DOCA and seven control pigs underwent 3 T CMR at rest and during
dobutamine stress. Left ventricular/atrial (LV/LA) function and myocardial
mass (LVMM), strains and torsion were evaluated from (tagged) cine imaging. 4D
phase-contrast measurements were used to assess blood flow and peak
velocities, including transmitral early-diastolic (E) and myocardial tissue
(E’) velocities and coronary sinus blood flow. Myocardial perfusion reserve
was estimated from stress-to-rest time-averaged coronary sinus flow. Global
native myocardial T1 times were derived from prototype modified Look-Locker
inversion-recovery (MOLLI) short-axis T1 maps. After in-vivo measurements,
transmural biopsies were collected for stereological evaluation including the
volume fractions of interstitium (VV(int/LV)) and collagen (VV(coll/LV)).
Rest, stress, and stress-to-rest differences of cardiac and myocardial
parameters in DOCA and control animals were compared by t-test. Results In
DOCA pigs LVMM (p < 0.001) and LV wall-thickness (end-systole/end-diastole, p
= 0.003/p = 0.007) were elevated. During stress, increase of LV ejection-
fraction and decrease of end-systolic volume accounted for normal
contractility reserves in DOCA and control pigs. Rest-to-stress differences of
cardiac index (p = 0.040) and end-diastolic volume (p = 0.042) were
documented. Maximal (p = 0.042) and minimal (p = 0.012) LA volumes in DOCA
pigs were elevated at rest; total LA ejection-fraction decreased during stress
(p = 0.006). E’ was lower in DOCA pigs, corresponding to higher E/E’ at rest
(p = 0.013) and stress (p = 0.026). Myocardial perfusion reserve was reduced
in DOCA pigs (p = 0.031). T1-times and VV(int/LV) did not differ between
groups, whereas VV(coll/LV) levels were higher in DOCA pigs (p = 0.044).
Conclusions LA enlargement, E’ and E/E’ were the markers that showed the most
pronounced differences between DOCA and control pigs at rest. Inadequate
increase of myocardial perfusion reserve during stress might represent a
metrics for early-stage HFpEF. Myocardial T1 mapping could not detect elevated
levels of myocardial collagen in this model. Trial registration The study was
approved by the local Bioethics Committee of Vienna, Austria
(BMWF-66.010/0091-II/3b/2013)
T2-mapping in normal volunteers compared to patients with edema reveals wide range of myocardial T2 in female volunteers
Effects from RF spoiling disequilibrium in the background offsets of phase-contrast velocity imaging
To investigate how disequilibrium of spoiling affects background offset errors in phase-contrast velocity images
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