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Query: UMLS:C0034065 (pulmonary embolism)
14,979 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The accurate assessment of pulmonary perfusion is especially important in the evaluation of patients with suspected pulmonary embolism, a common and potentially lethal disorder that can be treated by aggressive anticoagulation. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time the use of MR to image pulmonary perfusion in humans by using dynamic imaging after contrast administration. The technique, which uses an inversion recovery turbo FLASH sequence with ultrashort TE (1.4 ms) and 1-s temporal resolution, was tested in a series of eight healthy subjects and in a porcine model of pulmonary embolism. After the administration of gadopentetate dimeglumine in humans and animal models, there was serial enhancement of the systemic veins, right atrium, right ventricle, and pulmonary arteries. The pulmonary arterial tree was visualized beyond the segmental branches, followed by a gradual diffuse increase in signal intensity of the lung parenchyma over a period of 4.0-7.0 s. Pulmonary circulation times ranged from 3.0-3.4 s. Whereas a high dose (20 or 40 ml) of contrast agent tended to produce the most intense parenchymal enhancement, a low dose (5 ml) was best for showing recirculation. In the animal model, a perfusion defect due to a pulmonary embolus was clearly shown and confirmed by cine angiography. It is concluded that MRI of lung perfusion is feasible. With further development, perfusion MRI could eventually have a significant clinical role in the diagnostic evaluation of pulmonary embolism.
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PMID:Pulmonary perfusion: qualitative assessment with dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI using ultra-short TE and inversion recovery turbo FLASH. 889

This study attempted to assess the accuracy and potential of lung magnetic resonance (MR) perfusion imaging compared with perfusion scintigraphy in the evaluation of patients with suspected lung perfusion defects. The technique, which uses an inversion recovery turbo-FLASH sequence with ultra-short TE (1.4 msec), was tested in 24 patients suspected clinically of having acute pulmonary embolism (n = 19) and in patients with severe pulmonary emphysema (n = 5). Perfusion lung scintigraphy was performed within 48 hours prior to the MRI examination in both groups of patients. The dynamic study was acquired in the coronal plane and consisted of 10 images of 6 slices (a total of 60 images per series). Gadopentetate dimeglumine (0.1 mmol/kg) was manually injected as a compact bolus during the acquisition of the first image. Three senior radiologists reviewed all unprocessed two-dimensional coronal sections. They were blinded to clinical data and other imaging modalities. For the three observers, the average sensitivity and specificity of MR were 69% and 91%, respectively. The overall agreement between MR and scintigraphy appears to be good, with a good correlation between the two modalities (kappa = 0.63). However, the data showed variability depending on the location of the perfusion defect, with higher accuracy in the upper lobes. The agreement between MR perfusion and scintigraphy appears to be moderate in the left inferior lobe (kappa = 0.48). The data showed an overall good interobserver agreement (kappa = 0.66). MR perfusion of the lung is a promising technique in detecting lung perfusion defects.
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PMID:Prospective comparison of MR lung perfusion and lung scintigraphy. 1003 Jun 51

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is capable of imaging infiltrative lung diseases as well as solid lung pathologies with high sensitivity. The broad use of lung MRI was limited by the long study time as well as its sensitivity to motion and susceptibility artifacts. These disadvantages were overcome by the utilisation of new techniques such as parallel imaging. This article aims to propose a standard MR imaging protocol at 1.5T and presents a spectrum of indications. The standard protocol comprises non-contrast-enhanced sequences. Following a GRE localizer (2D-FLASH), a coronal T2w single-shot half-Fourier TSE (HASTE) sequence with a high sensitivity for infiltrates and a transversal T1w 3D-GRE (VIBE) sequence with a high sensitivity for small lesions are acquired in a single breath hold. Afterwards, a coronal steady-state free precession sequence (TrueFISP) in free breathing is obtained. This sequence has a high sensitivity for central pulmonary embolism. Distinct cardiac dysfunctions as well as an impairment of the breathing mechanism are visible. The last step of the basic protocol is a transversal T2w-STIR (T2-TIRM) in a multi-breath holds technique to visualize enlarged lymph nodes as well as skeletal lesions. The in-room time is approximately 15min. The extended protocol comprises contrast-enhanced sequences (3D-GRE sequence (VIBE) after contrast media; about five additional minutes). Indications are tumorous lesions, unclear (malignant) pleural effusions and inflammatory diseases (vaskulitis). A perfusion analysis can be achieved using a 3D-GRE in shared echo-technique (TREAT) with a high temporal resolution. This protocol can be completed using a MR-angiography (3D-FLASH) with high spatial resolution. The in-room time for the complete protocol is approximately 30min.
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PMID:MR imaging of the chest: a practical approach at 1.5T. 1790 Aug 43