Journal of Applied Physiology Information on EB 2010
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J Appl Physiol 92: 2439-2451, 2002; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00900.2001
8750-7587/02 $5.00
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Vol. 92, Issue 6, 2439-2451, June 2002

Lung perfusion impairments in pulmonary embolic and airway obstruction with noncontrast MR imaging

Kazuyoshi Suga1, Nobuhiko Ogasawara1, Munemasa Okada1, Toshinobu Tsukuda1, Naofumi Matsunaga1, and Mitsue Miyazaki2

1 Department of Radiology, Yamaguchi University School of Medicine, Ube, Yamaguchi 755-8505 and 2 Magnetic Resonance Engineering Department, Toshiba Nasu Works, Otawara, Tochigi 329-3200, Japan

A noncontrast electrocardiography (ECG)-gated, fast-spin-echo magnetic resonance imaging was applied to noninvasively define perfusion impairments in pulmonary embolic and airway obstruction dog models. Two-phase ECG-gated lung images of the minimal lung signal intensity during systole and maximal signal intensity during diastole were acquired by using optimized R-wave triggering delay times in seven dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium before, soon after, and 2 mo after embolization with enbucrilate and in another eight dogs before and after bronchial occlusion with balloon catheters, in combination with a gadolinium diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-enhanced dynamic study. An ECG-gated subtraction image between the two-phase lung images provided a uniform but gravity-dependent perfusion map in normal lungs. Furthermore, it defined all 13 variable-size perfusion deficits associated with pulmonary embolism and the dynamically decreased perfusion with time after bronchial occlusion in all the airway obstruction models. These results were consistent with contrast-enhanced pulmonary arterial perfusion phase images. This noncontrast imaging could be equivalent to a contrast-enhanced dynamic study in the definition of regionally impaired pulmonary arterial perfusion in pulmonary embolism and airway obstruction.

magnetic resonance imaging; pulmonary embolism; electrocardiographic gating; gadolinium diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, experimental studies





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