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1.
NMR Biomed ; 37(6): e5121, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38423986

ABSTRACT

Although hyperpolarized (HP) 129Xe ventilation MRI can be carried out within a breath hold, it is still challenging for many sick patients. Compressed sensing (CS) is a viable alternative to accelerate this approach. However, undersampled images with identical sampling ratios differ from one another. Twenty subjects (n = 10 healthy and n = 10 patients with asthma) were scanned using a GE MR750 3 T scanner, acquiring fully sampled 2D multi-slice HP 129Xe lung ventilation images (10 s breath hold, 128 × 80 (FE × PE-frequency encoding × phase encoding) and 16 slices). Using fully sampled data, 500 variable-density Cartesian random undersampling patterns were generated, each at eight different sampling ratios from 10% to 80%. The parallel imaging and compressed sensing (PICS) command from BART was employed to reconstruct undersampled data. The signal to noise ratio (SNR), structural similarity index measurement (SSIM) and sidelobe to peak ratio of each were subsequently compared. There was a high degree of variation in both SNR and SSIM results from each of the 500 masks of each sampling rate. As the undersampling increases, there is more variation in the quantifying metrics, for both healthy and asthmatic individuals. Our study shows that random undersampling poses a significant challenge when applied at sampling ratios less than 60%, despite fulfilling CS's incoherency criteria. Such low sampling ratios will result in a large variety of undersampling patterns. Therefore, skipped segments of k-space cannot be allowed to happen randomly at low sampling rates. By optimizing the sampling pattern, CS will reach its full potential and be able to be applied to a highly undersampled 129Xe lung dataset.


Subject(s)
Lung , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Signal-To-Noise Ratio , Xenon Isotopes , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Male , Female , Adult , Asthma/diagnostic imaging , Middle Aged , Data Compression
2.
Radiol Cardiothorac Imaging ; 5(6): e230054, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38166343

ABSTRACT

Purpose To determine if proton (1H) MRI-derived specific ventilation is responsive to bronchodilator (BD) therapy and associated with clinical biomarkers of type 2 airway inflammation and airways dysfunction in severe asthma. Materials and Methods In this prospective study, 27 participants with severe asthma (mean age, 52 years ± 9 [SD]; 17 female, 10 male) and seven healthy controls (mean age, 47 years ± 16; five female, two male), recruited between 2018 and 2021, underwent same-day spirometry, respiratory oscillometry, and tidal breathing 1H MRI. Participants with severe asthma underwent all assessments before and after BD therapy, and type 2 airway inflammatory biomarkers were determined (blood eosinophil count, sputum eosinophil percentage, sputum eosinophil-free granules, and fraction of exhaled nitric oxide) to generate a cumulative type 2 biomarker score. Specific ventilation was derived from tidal breathing 1H MRI and its response to BD therapy, and relationships with biomarkers of type 2 airway inflammation and airway dysfunction were evaluated. Results Mean MRI specific ventilation improved with BD inhalation (from 0.07 ± 0.04 to 0.11 ± 0.04, P < .001). Post-BD MRI specific ventilation (P = .046) and post-BD change in MRI specific ventilation (P = .006) were greater in participants with asthma with type 2 low biomarkers compared with participants with type 2 high biomarkers of airway inflammation. Post-BD change in MRI specific ventilation was correlated with change in forced expiratory volume in 1 second (r = 0.40, P = .04), resistance at 5 Hz (r = -0.50, P = .01), resistance at 19 Hz (r = -0.42, P = .01), reactance area (r = -0.54, P < .01), and reactance at 5 Hz (r = 0.48, P = .01). Conclusion Specific ventilation evaluated with tidal breathing 1H MRI was responsive to BD therapy and was associated with clinical biomarkers of airways disease in participants with severe asthma. Keywords: MRI, Severe Asthma, Ventilation, Type 2 Inflammation Supplemental material is available for this article. © RSNA, 2023 See also the commentary by Moore and Chandarana in this issue.


Subject(s)
Asthma , Protons , Male , Humans , Female , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Asthma/diagnostic imaging , Inflammation , Biomarkers , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
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