Many patients with heart conditions have normal readings using standard echocardiography metrics such as TAPSE and RVEF.
A patient with shortness of breath and an atrial septal defect.
Other patients who are doing well have abnormal readings using standard 2D and 3D echocardiography metrics such as TAPSE.
A patient after heart transplant, recovering well
Although the patient appears to be doing well, and has a good RVEF, his TAPSE value is severely abnormal.
Metric | Value |
---|---|
TAPSE | 10 mm |
RVEF | 64% |
ReVISION reveals and quantifies the reasons for the patient's good recovery and strong RVEF
ReVISION Metric | This Patient | Normal Value |
---|---|---|
Radial Ejection Fraction | 35% | 25% |
RV function can provide important diagnostic and prognostic information for patients with cardiopulmonary disease.
But unlike LV function, it has not been possible to fully characterize RV function using 3D echocardiography – until now.
ReVISION is an innovative new software technique that builds on 3D echocardiography to provide unique insights into RV function.
Developed by cardiologists like you, ReVISION is trusted by researchers in some of the world’s leading institutions.
By revealing longitudinal, radial, anteroposterior, and segmental quantitative RV metrics, ReVISION enables you to uncover hidden RV dysfunction and study its impact on cardiopulmonary health.
Accessed via our website, all you need to start assessing RV function in your next patient is their 3D echo file and a browser.
ReVISION is the only clinical solution available to quantify the longitudinal, radial and anteroposterior components of RV wall motion and also to provide segmental information based on 3D echocardiographic models.
Longitudinal Axis
Radial Axis
Longitudinal Axis
Radial Axis
Anteroposterior Axis
Segmentation
Anteroposterior Axis
Segmentation
ReVISION offers unique quantified metrics to give you a comprehensive picture of the right ventricle. These metrics provide an extra measure of confidence in even the most challenging cases.
A Healthy Patient
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
Heart Transplant
Athlete's Heart
Unique ReVISION Metrics
Watch a case study on a patient with suspected pulmonary embolism, analyzed with ReVISION.
ReVISION is available for clinical use, having received an FDA 510(k) clearance.
We always want to learn how researchers are interested to use ReVISION. Please take a minute or two to give us your feedback!
For more information on how ReVISION may be used for patients with specific conditions, please see:
Cardiology researchers at the head of their field are using ReVISION to make new discoveries every day.
ReVISION's 3 axis RV function metrics and 15 segment RV analysis allows researchers to make new discoveries about the RV and about cardiovascular health with more precision than was ever previously possible.
To read research papers published using ReVISION, please visit our publications page.
We Take Data Privacy Seriously
Most cardiologists have access to 3D echo, but some have been reluctant to use it because of the limitations of RVEF and related metrics, and because of the work involved in post-processing the 3D echo data. With ReVISION, you can access much more detailed RV metrics easily, by simply uploading 3D DICOM files from your 3D echo machine to ReVISION.
3D echocardiography revolutionized the assessment of cardiac structure and function. ReVISION builds on 3D echo to better characterize right ventricular function, and the function of the entire cardiopulmonary system.
3D echocardiography-derived metrics, such as right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF - the global measure of pump function), have been shown to be clearly superior to conventional echocardiographic measures of RV function in the prediction of adverse clinical outcomes (1) and RVEF's added value is independent of LV function (2).
Despite RVEF's power, patients with good RVEF values still experience adverse clinical events and progression of the disease course. This is true in pulmonary hypertension patients, patients undergoing cardiac interventions, congenital heart disease patients, and those who have only subtle segmental dysfunction.
RVEF describes the global function of the right ventricle, but the pattern of RV contraction can change significantly despite unchanged global function (3,4). These underlying mechanical changes hold important diagnostic and prognostic information in a variety of cardiopulmonary diseases.
ReVISION reveals underlying mechanical changes in the RV the RVEF and other conventional metrics can miss.
User accounts that can run analyses and export data: up to 3
Supports 1 project with a single combined dataset
Supports export of analysis results in table format
ReVISION features enabled: all
Included raw 3D echo DICOM uploads per month: 12
Each additional raw 3D echo DICOM upload: $30 USD
TomTec 3D model uploads: Unlimited
Delivery: software as a service via revision.arguscognitive.com
7 day risk free free trial
User accounts that can run analyses and export data: unlimited
Supports 1 project with a single combined dataset
Supports export of analysis results in table format
ReVISION features enabled: all
Included raw 3D echo DICOM uploads per month: 100
Each additional raw 3D echo DICOM upload: $30 USD
TomTec 3D model uploads: Unlimited
Delivery: software as a service via revision.arguscognitive.com
7 day risk free free trial
References
[1] Sayour A, Tokodi M, Celeng C, Takx R, Fábián A, Lakatos B, Friebel R, Surkova E, Merkely B, Kovács A. Superior prognostic value of three-dimensional echocardiography-derived right ventricular ejection fraction: a meta-analysis. medRxiv (pre-print); doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.06.02.22275907
[2] Surkova E, Muraru D, Genovese D, Aruta P, Palermo C, Badano LP. Relative Prognostic Importance of Left and Right Ventricular Ejection Fraction in Patients With Cardiac Diseases. J Am Soc Echocardiogr. 2019 Nov;32(11):1407-1415.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.echo.2019.06.009. Epub 2019 Aug 7. PMID: 31400846.
[3] Tokodi M, Németh E, Lakatos BK, Kispál E, Tősér Z, Staub L, Rácz K, Soltész Á, Szigeti S, Varga T, Gál J, Merkely B, Kovács A. Right ventricular mechanical pattern in patients undergoing mitral valve surgery: a predictor of post-operative dysfunction? ESC Heart Fail. 2020 Jun;7(3):1246-1256. doi: 10.1002/ehf2.12682. Epub 2020 Mar 26. PMID: 32220010; PMCID: PMC7261576.
[4] Surkova E, Kovács A, Tokodi M, Lakatos BK, Merkely B, Muraru D, Ruocco A, Parati G, Badano LP. Contraction Patterns of the Right Ventricle Associated with Different Degrees of Left Ventricular Systolic Dysfunction. Circ Cardiovasc Imaging. 2021 Oct;14(10):e012774. doi: 10.1161/CIRCIMAGING.121.012774. Epub 2021 Sep 30. PMID: 34587749; PMCID: PMC8522626.