Mayo Clinic researchers use ultrasound to describe subtle heart
muscle motions
August 01, 2005
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Thinkpad ROCHESTER, Minn. - By using sound waves Mayo Clinic researchers
have described subtle changes in the motion of the heart that are
measurable by ultrasound and may improve understanding of heart
function, and possibly be a noninvasive aid in predicting impending
heart damage including heart attacks. The study could also
contribute to optimal adjustment of cardiac pacemakers or perhaps
better design of artificial hearts. The findings, published in the
current Journal of Applied Physiology [JApplPhysiol.000191.2005],
are based on "snapshots" of the mechanical transitions that occur
between the main relaxation and contraction phases of the
heartbeat. During these split-second transitions, the heart muscle
"shifts gears" or prepares for the upcoming phase.
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Microsoft "This is only a start and much work is needed, but we are
optimistic that our research will ultimately lead to development of
noninvasive, broadly clinically available methods in diagnostic
ultrasonography," says Marek Belohlavek, M.D., Ph.D., Mayo Clinic
ultrasound imaging specialist and senior researcher of the study.
"These methods could improve our chances in predicting cardiac
events, so that preventive measures could be taken. And in patients
with an existing heart condition, a detailed analysis of cardiac
function could contribute to therapeutic optimization of heart
performance." A patent application has been filed based on this
research.
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Laptop Computers Researchers at the Mayo Clinic Translational Ultrasound Research
Unit study the mechanical, biochemical and electrical aspects of
these transitions which occur between phases of relaxation - when
the heart ventricles fill with a volume of blood - and contraction
- when the heart ejects most of the blood volume into body
circulation. Recently advanced, high-resolution ultrasound tissue
Doppler imaging allowed them to experimentally measure these
transitional tissue deformations, which last only milliseconds and
are unnoticeable to the human eye. The technology allows
slow-motion comparisons of these events separately between the
inner and outer layers of the cardiac left ventricle. The
researchers' published measurements demonstrate how a rapid
succession of motions occurring within tissue of the ventricular
wall can appear chaotic if not observed closely and with high
temporal resolution. The data also show how these transitions
"reorganize" the ventricle to best perform its cycles of filling
and ejection.
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Laptop Computer Significance of the Findings
- date information and tools that reflect the expertise and standard of excellence of the Mayo Clinic.
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Desktop Computer Alterations in the cardiac mechanical transitions detected by
ultrasound imaging can be used as early indicators to predict heart
problems, without the risk of an invasive procedure. Such an early
warning system could allow physicians to intervene with appropriate
therapies and thus prevent problems that could lead to heart attack
or heart failure. The knowledge may also help researchers to
develop new and targeted treatments in some heart diseases or
further improve cardiac pacemakers or artificial hearts.
Notebooks Animal Model of Heart Functioning
Lenovo Until recently, it was thought to be sufficient to study the
function of the heart muscle during the relaxation and ejection
phases of the heartbeat. Now, technological improvements in imaging
have allowed studies of the heart muscle condition during the
transitional phases. These short-lived mechanical transitions are
successfully accomplished and prepare the heart for the next beat
optimally only if the mechanical, biochemical and electrical events
in the cardiac muscle work in concert and delivery of nutrients and
oxygen are uninterrupted. Understanding these rapid transitional
events not only improves fundamental understanding of heart
functioning, but their dependence on various conditions makes these
events vulnerable. This vulnerability translates into early changes
in the transitional events detected by the state-of-the-art
diagnostic imaging methods.
Hard Drive Using pigs as a very close model to human heart function,
researchers established benchmarks for measuring normal and
abnormal transitions in heart muscle layers. Accurate analyses of
motion, deformation (strain), electrical impulses and other
parameters characterize the transitional events between the phases
of cardiac filling and ejection.
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