Gilion Hautvast1, Carol Salton2,
Michael Chuang2,3, Marcel Breeuwer1,4, Christopher
O'Donnell3,5,
1Philips Healthcare, Best,
Netherlands; 2Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA,
United States; 3National Heart, Lung & Blood Institute,
Framingham, MA, United States; 4Eindhoven University of Technology,
Eindhoven, Netherlands; 5Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston,
MA, United States
In this work we examine cine CMR data derived from a large, community-based cohort to determine: 1) the contribution of the basal LV slice(s) at ED to LV volumes and EF and 2) the effect of manual correction of automatically-detected LV contours on global LV functional parameters. Our results show that automatic myocardial contour detection for determination of LV volumes and EF is feasible and accurate in a large, population-based sample of adults. After inclusion of basal slice data, further manual corrections to the automatically-detected contours have minimal effect on the final outcome of global functional parameters.