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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

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Medical Biophysics

Western University

2012

Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Hyperpolarized 3he And 129xe Mr Imaging In Healthy Volunteers And Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Miranda Kirby, Sarah Svenningsen, Amir Owrangi, Andrew Wheatley, Adam Farag, Alexei Ouriadov, Giles E Santyr, Roya Etemad-Rezai, Harvey O Coxson, David G Mccormack, Grace Parraga Sep 2012

Hyperpolarized 3he And 129xe Mr Imaging In Healthy Volunteers And Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, Miranda Kirby, Sarah Svenningsen, Amir Owrangi, Andrew Wheatley, Adam Farag, Alexei Ouriadov, Giles E Santyr, Roya Etemad-Rezai, Harvey O Coxson, David G Mccormack, Grace Parraga

Medical Biophysics Publications

PURPOSE: To quantitatively compare hyperpolarized helium 3 (3He) and xenon 129 (129Xe) magnetic resonance (MR) images obtained within 5 minutes in healthy volunteers and patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and to evaluate the correlations between 3He and 129Xe MR imaging measurements and those from spirometry and plethysmography.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: This study was approved by an ethics board and compliant with HIPAA. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects. Eight healthy volunteers and 10 patients with COPD underwent MR imaging, spirometry, and plethysmography. Ventilation defect percentages (VDPs) at 3He and 129Xe imaging were obtained by using semiautomated …


What Can Computed Tomography And Magnetic Resonance Imaging Tell Us About Ventilation?, Brett A Simon, David W Kaczka, Alexander A Bankier, Grace Parraga Aug 2012

What Can Computed Tomography And Magnetic Resonance Imaging Tell Us About Ventilation?, Brett A Simon, David W Kaczka, Alexander A Bankier, Grace Parraga

Medical Biophysics Publications

This review provides a summary of pulmonary functional imaging approaches for determining pulmonary ventilation, with a specific focus on multi-detector x-ray computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). We provide the important functional definitions of pulmonary ventilation typically used in medicine and physiology and discuss the fact that some of the imaging literature describes gas distribution abnormalities in pulmonary disease that may or may not be related to the physiological definition or clinical interpretation of ventilation. We also review the current state-of-the-field in terms of the key physiological questions yet unanswered related to ventilation and gas distribution in lung disease. …


Quantitative Pulmonary Imaging Using Computed Tomography And Magnetic Resonance Imaging, George R Washko, Grace Parraga, Harvey O Coxson Apr 2012

Quantitative Pulmonary Imaging Using Computed Tomography And Magnetic Resonance Imaging, George R Washko, Grace Parraga, Harvey O Coxson

Medical Biophysics Publications

Measurements of lung function, including spirometry and body plethesmography, are easy to perform and are the current clinical standard for assessing disease severity. However, these lung functional techniques do not adequately explain the observed variability in clinical manifestations of disease and offer little insight into the relationship of lung structure and function. Lung imaging and the image-based assessment of lung disease has matured to the extent that it is common for clinical, epidemiologic and genetic investigation to have a component dedicated to image analysis. There are several exciting imaging modalities currently being used for the non-invasive study of lung anatomy …


Chest Mri In Children: Why Bother?, Amir M Owrangi, Grace Parraga Jan 2012

Chest Mri In Children: Why Bother?, Amir M Owrangi, Grace Parraga

Medical Biophysics Publications

In this issue of Respirology, Montella and colleagues ask this question: How does high‐field chest MRI compare with CT of children with non‐cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease? In an important extension of the first description of this study where they compared MRI and CT with pulmonary function measurements, the authors evaluated how widely‐used chest CT and almost never‐utilized lung MRI compare for diagnostic imaging of chronic lung disease. Here they show that high‐field (3Tesla as compared with the 1.5Tesla clinical standard) thoracic MRI has high reliability and good‐to‐excellent agreement with CT, definitively answering the important question at hand; their results …


Hyperpolarized 3he Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Of Bronchoscopic Airway Bypass In Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease., Lindsay Mathew, Miranda Kirby, Donald Farquhar, Christopher Licskai, Giles Santyr, Roya Etemad-Rezai, Grace Parraga, David G Mccormack Jan 2012

Hyperpolarized 3he Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Of Bronchoscopic Airway Bypass In Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease., Lindsay Mathew, Miranda Kirby, Donald Farquhar, Christopher Licskai, Giles Santyr, Roya Etemad-Rezai, Grace Parraga, David G Mccormack

Medical Biophysics Publications

A 73-year-old exsmoker with Global initiative for chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage III chronic obstructive pulmonary disease underwent airway bypass (AB) as part of the Exhale Airway Stents for Emphysema (EASE) trial, and was the only EASE subject to undergo hyperpolarized 3He magnetic resonance imaging for evaluation of lung function pre- and post-AB. 3He magnetic resonance imaging was acquired twice previously (32 and eight months pre-AB) and twice post-AB (six and 12 months post-AB). Six months post-AB, his increase in forced vital capacity was