4.7 Article

MRI of helium-3 gas in healthy lungs: Posture related variations of alveolar size

Journal

JOURNAL OF MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 331-335

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmri.20104

Keywords

hyperpolarized; ADC; MRI; lungs; helium-3; physiology

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Purpose: To probe the variation of alveolar size in healthy lung tissue as a function of posture using diffusion-weighted helium-3 hyperpolarized gas imaging. Materials and Methods: Measurements of the helium-3 apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) were made on six healthy subjects. These were used to show the variation of alveolar size between the lower-most dependent regions of the lung compared to the uppermost regions of the lung in four postures: supine, prone, left-lateral decubitus, and right-lateral decubitus. Results: The distribution of acinar size in the lungs was found to be heterogeneous, and influenced by lung orientation. In nearly all postures, the ADC was significantly higher in the non-dependent uppermost regions of the lung compared to the dependent lowermost regions of the lung; the greatest variation was found in the left-lateral decubitus position. The difference in ADC between uppermost and lowermost regions was on average-0.012.cm(2)second(-1), which represents 20% of the average ADC value for the whole lung. A systematic decrease in ADC from the apex of the lung to the base was also found, which corresponds to an inherent gradient in alveolar size. Conclusion: The posture dependent variations in ADC were attributed to compression of the parenchyma under its own weight and the mass of the heart.

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