Assessment of in vitro vs. in vivo lung structure using hyperpolarized helium-3 diffusion magnetic resonance imaging |
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Authors: | Jaime F. Mata Talissa A. AltesKai Ruppert Klaus D. HagspielGrady W. Miller James R. BrookemanJohn P. Mugler III |
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Affiliation: | Center for In-vivo Hyperpolarized Gas MR Imaging, Department of Radiology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Box 801339, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study was to assess the properties of a model system for hyperpolarized He-3 (HHe) diffusion MR imaging created from the lungs of New Zealand white rabbits by drying the lungs while inflated at constant pressure. The dried lungs were prepared by sacrificing the animal, harvesting the lungs en bloc and dehydrating the lungs for several days using dry compressed air. In four rabbits, the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of HHe gas was measured in vivo and, within 1 week, in vitro in the dried lungs. To assess long-term repeatability, in vitro ADC values were measured again 3 months later. Dried lungs from four additional rabbits were imaged twice on the same day to assess the short-term repeatability of ADC measurements, and tissue samples from these lungs were then removed for histology. In vivo and in vitro ADC maps showed similar features and similar distributions of ADC values; mean in vivo and in vitro ADC values differed by less than 12%. The in vitro mean ADC values were highly reproducible, with no more than 5% difference between measurements for the short-term repeatability and less than 17% difference between measurements for the long-term repeatability. Histological samples from the dried lungs demonstrated that the lung structure remained intact. These results suggest that the dried lungs are a useful and inexpensive alternative to human or in vivo animal studies for HHe diffusion MR sequence development, testing and optimization. |
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Keywords: | Lung Diffusion Hyperpolarized gas Helium-3 MRI In vitro |
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