Back to Search Start Over

Ultra-short echo-time pulmonary MRI: evaluation and reproducibility in COPD subjects with and without bronchiectasis.

Authors :
Ma W
Sheikh K
Svenningsen S
Pike D
Guo F
Etemad-Rezai R
Leipsic J
Coxson HO
McCormack DG
Parraga G
Source :
Journal of magnetic resonance imaging : JMRI [J Magn Reson Imaging] 2015 May; Vol. 41 (5), pp. 1465-74. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 26.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: To evaluate ultra-short-echo-time (UTE) MRI pulmonary signal-intensity measurements and reproducibility in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).<br />Methods: A two-dimensional sequence (echo-time = 0.05 ms; acquisition-time = 13 s) with interleaved half-pulse excitation and radial ramp-sampling was used with compressed-sensing to reconstruct UTE images from under-sampled data. Five healthy volunteers and 15 subjects with COPD provided written informed consent to imaging and pulmonary-function-tests. Healthy volunteers underwent MRI at four lung volumes: full-expiration, functional-residual-capacity (FRC), FRC+1L, and full-inhalation; COPD patients underwent computed-tomography (CT) and MRI at FRC+1L. Three-week reproducibility was evaluated and the relative area of the density histogram ≤ -950 HU (RA950 ) was compared with mean MRI signal-intensity. The 15th percentile of signal-intensity-histogram (SI15 ) was compared with the 15th percentile of the CT-density-histogram (HU15 ).<br />Results: In healthy subjects, signal-intensity correlated with the inverse of lung volume (r = 0.99; P = 0.007). Contrast-to-noise and signal-to-noise ratios were significantly improved for 32-channel UTE (P < 0.01). The coefficient of variation for 3-week repeated measurements was 4%. There were significant correlations for signal-intensity with RA950 (r = -0.71; P = 0.005), FEV1 /FVC (r = 0.59; P = 0.02), and for SI15 with HU15 (r = 0.62; P = 0.01).<br />Conclusion: Pulmonary signal-intensity is reproducible and related to tissue density. In COPD subjects with and without bronchiectasis, signal-intensity was also related to pulmonary function and CT measurements.<br /> (© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1522-2586
Volume :
41
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of magnetic resonance imaging : JMRI
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24965907
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jmri.24680