Chapter-051 Three-dimensional Echocardiography: Is it Superior to Two-dimensional Echocardiography for Valvular Heart Disease?

Author(s):  
Sameer Shrivastava ◽  
Vinay Sharma
F1000Research ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 4 ◽  
pp. 914 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Hahn

Echocardiography is the imaging modality of choice for the assessment of patients with valvular heart disease. Echocardiographic advancements may have particular impact on the assessment and management of patients with valvular heart disease. This review will summarize the current literature on advancements, such as three-dimensional echocardiography, strain imaging, intracardiac echocardiography, and fusion imaging, in this patient population.


Author(s):  
Shujie Deng ◽  
Gavin Wheeler ◽  
Nicolas Toussaint ◽  
Lindsay Munroe ◽  
Suryava Bhattacharya ◽  
...  

The intricate nature of congenital heart disease requires understanding of complex, patient-specific three-dimensional dynamic anatomy of the heart, from imaging data such as three-dimensional echocardiography for successful outcomes from surgical and interventional procedures. Conventional clinical systems use flat screens and therefore display remains two-dimensional, which undermines the full understanding of the three-dimensional dynamic data. Additionally, control of three-dimensional visualisation with two-dimensional tools is often difficult, so used only by imaging specialists. In this paper we describe a virtual reality system for immersive surgery planning using dynamic three-dimensional echocardiography, which enables fast prototyping for visualisation such as volume rendering, multi-planar reformatting, flow visualisation, and advanced interaction such as three-dimensional cropping, windowing, measurement, haptic feedback, automatic image orientation, and multi-user interactions. The available features were evaluated by imaging and non-imaging clinicians, showing that the virtual reality system can help improve understanding and communication of the three-dimensional echocardiography imaging and potentially benefit congenital heart disease treatment.


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