Three-dimensional echocardiography (3D ECHO) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging are frequently used in patients and animals to evaluate heart functions. Inverse finite element (FE) modeling is increasingly applied to MR images to quantify left ventricular (LV) function and estimate myocardial contractility and other cardiac biomarkers. It remains unclear, however, as to whether myocardial contractility derived from the inverse FE model based on 3D ECHO images is comparable to that derived from MR images. To address this issue, we developed a subject-specific inverse FE model based on 3D ECHO and MR images acquired from seven healthy swine models to investigate if there are differences in myocardial contractility and LV geometrical features derived using these two imaging modalities. We showed that end-systolic and end-diastolic volumes derived from 3D ECHO images are comparable to those derived from MR images (R2=0.805 and 0.969, respectively). As a result, ejection fraction from 3D ECHO and MR images are linearly correlated (R2=0.977) with the limit of agreement (LOA) ranging from -17.95% to 45.89%. Using an inverse FE modeling to fit pressure and volume waveforms in subject-specific LV geometry reconstructed from 3D ECHO and MR images, we found that myocardial contractility derived from these two imaging modalities are linearly correlated with an R2 value of 0.989, a gradient of 0.895, and LOA ranging from -6.11% to 36.66%. This finding supports using 3D ECHO images in image-based inverse FE modeling to estimate myocardial contractility.
Keywords: 3D ECHO; computational modeling; left ventricular mechanics; magnetic resonance image; myocardial contractility.