Three-dimensional imaging of mitral and tricuspid annuli for total artificial heart implantation.
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The establishment of a method to clarify the three-dimensional interrelations among the mitral annulus, tricuspid annulus, ascending aorta, and main pulmonary artery, which constitute the interface between the human and total artificial heart (TAH), is essential to the design of the TAH. In a previous study based on transverse magnetic resonance (MR) images of a live human heart, reconstructed images of mitral and tricuspid annuli were found to be deformed. The present study of cadaver and beating hearts revealed that the optimal conditions for atrioventricular annular reconstruction of a beating heart with electrocardiogram-gated MR imaging include use of four-chamber imaging, 5 mm slice thickness, and a slice interval ranging from 5 to 7 mm. Under these conditions, the mitral and tricuspid annuli of 3 beating hearts were reconstructed successfully. It was recognized that during the systolic phase the mitral and tricuspid annuli move anteriorly, leftward and downward, and that in late systole the right lateral margin of the tricuspid annulus is close to the sternum.
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