Impact of Vasodilation on Oxygen-Enhanced Functional Lung MRI at 0.55 T

Author:

Wieslander Björn1,Seemann Felicia2,Javed Ahsan2,Bruce Christopher G.2,Ramasawmy Rajiv2,Jaimes Andrea2,Lucas Katherine2,Frasier Victoria2,O'Brien Kendall J.2,Potersnak Amanda2,Khan Jaffar M.2,Schenke William H.2,Chen Marcus Y.2,Lederman Robert J.2,Campbell-Washburn Adrienne E.2

Affiliation:

1. Pulmonary Branch

2. Cardiovascular Branch, Division of Intramural Research, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.

Abstract

BackgroundOxygen-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (OE-MRI) can be used to assess regional lung function without ionizing radiation. Inhaled oxygen acts as a T1-shortening contrast agent to increase signal in T1-weighted (T1w) images. However, increase in proton density from pulmonary hyperoxic vasodilation may also contribute to the measured signal enhancement. Our aim was to quantify the relative contributions of the T1-shortening and vasodilatory effects of oxygen to signal enhancement in OE-MRI in both swine and healthy volunteers.MethodsWe imaged 14 anesthetized female swine (47 ± 8 kg) using a prototype 0.55 T high-performance MRI system while experimentally manipulating oxygenation and blood volume independently through oxygen titration, partial occlusion of the vena cava for volume reduction, and infusion of colloid fluid (6% hydroxyethyl starch) for volume increase. Ten healthy volunteers were imaged before, during, and after hyperoxia. Two proton density–weighted (PDw) and 2 T1w ultrashort echo time images were acquired per experimental state. The median PDw and T1w percent signal enhancement (PSE), compared with baseline room air, was calculated after image registration and correction for lung volume changes. Differences in median PSE were compared using Wilcoxon signed rank test.ResultsThe PSE in PDw images after 100% oxygen was similar in swine (1.66% ± 1.41%,P= 0.01) and in healthy volunteers (1.99% ± 1.79%,P= 0.02), indicating that oxygen-induced pulmonary vasodilation causes ~2% lung proton density increase. The PSE in T1w images after 100% oxygen was also similar (swine, 9.20% ± 1.68%,P< 0.001; healthy volunteers, 10.10% ± 3.05%,P< 0.001). The PSE in T1w enhancement was oxygen dose-dependent in anesthetized swine, and we measured a dose-dependent PDw image signal increase from infused fluids.ConclusionsThe contribution of oxygen-induced vasodilation to T1w OE-MRI signal was measurable using PDw imaging and was found to be ~2% in both anesthetized swine and in healthy volunteers. This finding may have implications for patients with regional or global hypoxia or vascular dysfunction undergoing OE-MRI and suggest that PDw imaging may be useful to account for oxygen-induced vasodilation in OE-MRI.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine

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