Intracardiac, intravascular, two-dimensional, high-frequency ultrasound imaging of pulmonary artery and its branches in humans and animals.

1990 
Intravascular ultrasound imaging is a promising new method for assessing vascular morphology. We evaluated the capability of intravascular ultrasound to quantify pulmonary artery (PA) morphology in vitro and explored the feasibility of in vivo PA imaging in animals and humans. In the in vitro study of 15 PA segments, we used a 20-MHz prototype ultrasound catheter. Intravascular ultrasound (y) provided crisp images of PA segments and demonstrated excellent correlations with anatomic measurements (x) in the estimation of luminal area (y = 0.89x + 2.95, r = 0.99, p less than 0.001), luminal diameter (n = 30, y = 0.79x + 0.96, r = 0.92, p less than 0.001), and vessel wall thickness (n = 60, y = 0.65x + 0.33, r = 0.85, p less than 0.001). We subsequently introduced the probe into the PA of 10 dogs and were able to obtain real-time, two-dimensional images of the main PA, its major branches, and farther smaller branches as far as the wedge level. To evaluate the in vivo feasibility of PA imaging in conscious hum...
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