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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Dyverfeldt Petter Associate Professor 1980 ) "

Search: WFRF:(Dyverfeldt Petter Associate Professor 1980 )

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1.
  • Good, Elin, 1983- (author)
  • Interrogating Atherosclerotic Plaque Biology Through Responses to Cardiovascular Risk Management and Imaging
  • 2023
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Atherosclerosis causes more deaths than any other disease worldwide, and the cause of death is most commonly a rupture of a vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque, resulting in a thrombotic event in the heart or brain. The major risk factors for plaque progression are well known, but all the mechanisms that drive atherosclerotic plaques towards catastrophic events are not yet fully elucidated.   This thesis revolves around the atherosclerotic plaque; how plaques can be analysed using cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging and the study of biological responses to cardiovascular risk management. In Study I we interrogated the quality of cardiovascular risk management in patients diagnosed with high-grade carotid stenosis and found that cardiovascular risk management was deficient in all aspects, despite the very high risk for events in these patients. Thus, we designed the next two studies to address the unmet clinical need for improved cardiovascular risk management in patients with carotid atherosclerosis while at the same time asking mechanistic questions about the effect of this approach on lymphocyte phenotypes (Study II) and on plaque composition (Study III).  In Study II, the effect of cardiovascular risk management on Natural Killer cell, Natural Killer T cell and T lymphocyte subpopulations were studied in patients with carotid atherosclerosis. Our results show a polarisation away from a senescent phenotype towards more naïve i.e., juvenile cell types suggesting a transition towards a possibly less pro-inflammatory lymphocyte profile.   In Study III, we applied a newly developed quantitative Dixon MRI technique to the quantification of lipid rich necrotic core and hemorrhage inside atherosclerotic plaques. Employing this technique, we explored the relationships between these high-risk plaque compositional features and circulating lipoproteins as they changed over time in response to cardiovascular risk management. In the current study there was no evidence for such a linear relationship.  To further study the associations between inflammation and quantitative plaque measurements we explored in Study IV the relationship between inflammation in atherosclerotic plaques as measured by 18F-FDG uptake and features of high-risk plaque as measured by quantitative Dixon MRI.   To facilitate the use of carotid MRI in larger cohorts we developed in Study V a technique for the segmentation of the carotid artery using supervised machine learning.   Taken together these studies describe the importance of cardiovascular risk management, the complexity of atherosclerotic plaque biology and they propose new strategies for quantitative plaque imaging.   
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2.
  • Ziegler, Magnus, 1990- (author)
  • Improving Assessments of Hemodynamics and Vascular Disease
  • 2019
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Blood vessels are more than simple pipes, passively enabling blood to pass through them. Their form and function are dynamic, changing with both aging and disease. This process involves a feedback loop wherein changes to the shape of a blood vessel affect the hemodynamics, causing yet more structural adaptation. This feedback loop is driven in part by the hemodynamic forces generated by the blood flow, and the distribution and strength of these forces appear to play a role in the initiation, progression, severity, and the outcome of vascular diseases.Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) offers a unique platform for investigating both the form and function of the vascular system. The form of the vascular system can be examined using MR-based angiography, to generate detailed geometric analyses, or through quantitative techniques for measuring the composition of the vessel wall and atherosclerotic plaques. To complement these analyses, 4D Flow MRI can be used to quantify the functional aspect of the vascular system, by generating a full time-resolved three-dimensional velocity field that represents the blood flow.This thesis aims to develop and evaluate new methods for assessing vascular disease using novel hemodynamic markers generated from 4D Flow MRI and quantitative MRI data towards the larger goal of a more comprehensive non-invasive examination oriented towards vascular disease. In Paper I, we developed and evaluated techniques to quantify flow stasis in abdominal aortic aneurysms to measure this under-explored aspect of aneurysmal hemodynamics. In Paper II, the distribution and intensity of turbulence in the aorta was quantified in both younger and older men to understand how aging changes this aspect of hemodynamics. A method to quantify the stresses generated by turbulence that act on the vessel wall was developed and evaluated using simulated flow data in Paper III, and in Paper V this method was utilized to examine the wall stresses of the carotid artery. The hemodynamics of vascular disease cannot be uncoupled from the anatomical changes the vessel wall undergoes, and therefore Paper IV developed and evaluated a semi-automatic method for quantifying several aspects of vessel wall composition. These developments, taken together, help generate more valuable information from imaging data, and can be pooled together with other methods to form a more comprehensive non-invasive examination for vascular disease.
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3.
  • Dyverfeldt, Petter, 1980- (author)
  • Extending MRI to the Quantification of Turbulence Intensity
  • 2010
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • In cardiovascular medicine, the assessment of blood flow is fundamental to the understanding and detection of disease. Many pharmaceutical, interventional, and surgical treatments impact the flow. The primary purpose of the cardiovascular system is to drive, control and maintain blood flow to all parts of the body. In the normal cardiovascular system, fluid transport is maintained at high efficiency and the blood flow is essentially laminar. Disturbed and turbulent blood flow, on the other hand, appears to be present in many cardiovascular diseases and may contribute to their initiation and progression. Despite strong indications of an important interrelationship between flow and cardiovascular disease, medical imaging has lacked a non-invasive tool for the in vivo assessment of disturbed and turbulent flow. As a result, the extent and role of turbulence in the blood flow of humans have not yet been fully investigated.Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a versatile tool for the non-invasive assessment of flow and has several important clinical and research applications, but might not yet have reached its full potential. Conventional MRI techniques for the assessment of flow are based on measurements of the mean velocity within an image voxel. The mean velocity corresponds to the first raw moment of the distribution of velocities within a voxel. An MRI framework for the quantification of any moment (mean, standard deviation, skew, etc.) of arbitrary velocity distributions is presented in this thesis.Disturbed and turbulent flows are characterized by velocity fluctuations that are superimposed on the mean velocity. The intensity of these velocity fluctuations can be quantified by their standard deviation, which is a commonly used measure of turbulence intensity. This thesis focuses on the development of a novel MRI method for the quantification of turbulence intensity. This method is mathematically derived and experimentally validated. Limitations and sources of error are investigated and guidelines for adequate application of MRI measurements of turbulence intensity are outlined. Furthermore, the method is adapted to the quantification of turbulence intensity in the pulsatile blood flow of humans and applied to a wide range of cardiovascular diseases. In these applications, elevated turbulence intensity was consistently detected in regions where highly disturbed flow was anticipated, and the effects of potential sources of errors were small.Diseased heart valves are often replaced with prosthetic heart valves, which, in spite of improved benefits and durability, continue to fall short of matching native flow patterns. In an in vitro setting, MRI was used to visualize and quantify turbulence intensity in the flow downstream from four common designs of prosthetic heart valves. Marked differences in the extent and degree of turbulence intensity were detected between the different valves.Mitral valve regurgitation is a common valve lesion associated with progressive left atrial and left ventricular remodelling, which may often require surgical correction to avoid irreversible ventricular dysfunction. The spatiotemporal dynamics of flow disturbances in mitral regurgitation were assessed based on measurements of flow patterns and turbulence intensity in a group of patients with significant regurgitation arising from similar valve lesions. Peak turbulence intensity occurred at the same time in all patients and the total turbulence intensity in the left atrium appeared closely related to the severity of regurgitation.MRI quantification of turbulence intensity has the potential to become a valuable tool in investigating the extent, timing and role of disturbed blood flow in the human cardiovascular system, as well as in the assessment of the effects of different therapeutic options in patients with vascular or valvular disorders.
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