18 results on '"Gaass, T."'
Search Results
2. MO-0955 Ventilation and perfusion imaging at a 0.35 T MR-Linac - feasibility and reproducibility study
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Klaar, R., Rabe, M., Gaass, T., Schneider, M.J., Benlala, I., Corradini, S., Eze, C., Belka, C., Landry, G., Kurz, C., and Dinkel, J.
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- 2023
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3. A preclinical Talbot-Lau prototype for x-ray dark-field imaging of human-sized objects
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Hauke, C., primary, Bartl, P., additional, Leghissa, M., additional, Ritschl, L., additional, Sutter, S. M., additional, Weber, T., additional, Zeidler, J., additional, Freudenberger, J., additional, Mertelmeier, T., additional, Radicke, M., additional, Michel, T., additional, Anton, G., additional, Meinel, F. G., additional, Baehr, A., additional, Auweter, S., additional, Bondesson, D., additional, Gaass, T., additional, Dinkel, J., additional, Reiser, M., additional, and Hellbach, K., additional
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- 2018
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4. Detection of artificial pulmonary lung nodules in Ultralow-Dose CT using an ex vivo lung phantom
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Burgard, C, primary, Gaaß, T, additional, Dinkel, J, additional, and Reiser, M, additional
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- 2015
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5. Iterative reconstruction for few-view grating-based phase-contrast CT —An in vitro mouse model
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Gaass, T., primary, Potdevin, G., additional, Bech, M., additional, Noël, P. B., additional, Willner, M., additional, Tapfer, A., additional, Pfeiffer, F., additional, and Haase, A., additional
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- 2013
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6. Herzperfusionsbildgebung ohne Kontrastmittel in der MRT: erste Ergebnisse.
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Dinkel, J, primary, Gaaß, T, additional, Bauman, G, additional, Stieltjes, B, additional, and Schlemmer, HP, additional
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- 2010
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7. Non-contrast-enhanced MRI of the pulmonary blood volume using two-compartment-modeled T(1) -relaxation.
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Gaass T, Dinkel J, Bauman G, Zaiss M, Hintze C, Haase A, and Laun F
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- 2012
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8. Non-Contrast-Enhanced Functional Lung MRI to Evaluate Treatment Response of Allergic Bronchopulmonary Aspergillosis in Patients With Cystic Fibrosis: A Pilot Study.
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Benlala I, Klaar R, Gaass T, Macey J, Bui S, Senneville BD, Berger P, Laurent F, Dournes G, and Dinkel J
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- Humans, Adolescent, Pilot Projects, Retrospective Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Lung, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Aspergillosis, Allergic Bronchopulmonary complications, Cystic Fibrosis
- Abstract
Background: Allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients is associated with severe lung damage and requires specific therapeutic management. Repeated imaging is recommended to both diagnose and follow-up response to treatment of ABPA in CF. However, high risk of cumulative radiation exposure requires evaluation of free-radiation techniques in the follow-up of CF patients with ABPA., Purpose: To evaluate whether Fourier decomposition (FD) functional lung MRI can detect response to treatment of ABPA in CF patients., Study Type: Retrospective longitudinal., Population: Twelve patients (7M, median-age:14 years) with CF and ABPA with pre- and post-treatment MRI., Field Strength/sequence: 2D-balanced-steady-state free-precession (bSSFP) sequence with FD at 1.5T., Assessment: Ventilation-weighted (V) and perfusion-weighted (Q) maps were obtained after FD processing of 2D-coronal bSSFP time-resolved images acquired before and 3-9 months after treatment. Defects extent was assessed on the functional maps using a qualitative semi-quantitative score (0 = absence/negligible, 1 = <50%, 2 = >50%). Mean and coefficient of variation (CV) of the ventilation signal-intensity (VSI) and the perfusion signal-intensity (QSI) were calculated. Measurements were performed independently by three readers and averaged. Inter-reader reproducibility of the measurements was assessed. Pulmonary function tests (PFTs) were performed within 1 week of both MRI studies as markers of the airflow-limitation severity., Statistical Tests: Comparisons of medians were performed using the paired Wilcoxon-test. Reproducibility was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). Correlations between MRI and PFT parameters were assessed using the Spearman-test (rho correlation-coefficient). A P-value <0.05 was considered as significant., Results: Defects extent on both V and Q maps showed a significant reduction after ABPA treatment (4.25 vs. 1.92 for V-defect-score and 5 vs. 2.75 for Q-defect-score). VSI_mean was significantly increased after treatment (280 vs. 167). Qualitative analyses reproducibility showed an ICC > 0.90, while the ICCs of the quantitative measurements was almost perfect (>0.99). Changes in VSI_cv and QSI_cv before and after treatment correlated inversely with changes of FEV1%p (rho = -0.68 for both)., Data Conclusion: Non-contrast-enhanced FD lung MRI has potential to reproducibly assess response to treatment of ABPA in CF patients and correlates with PFT obstructive parameters., Evidence Level: 4 TECHNICAL EFFICACY: Stage 3., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
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- 2024
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9. Ventilation and perfusion MRI at a 0.35 T MR-Linac: feasibility and reproducibility study.
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Klaar R, Rabe M, Gaass T, Schneider MJ, Benlala I, Eze C, Corradini S, Belka C, Landry G, Kurz C, and Dinkel J
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- Humans, Feasibility Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Ventilation, Male, Female, Adult, Respiration, Lung Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Lung diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Perfusion Imaging methods
- Abstract
Background: Hybrid devices that combine radiation therapy and MR-imaging have been introduced in the clinical routine for the treatment of lung cancer. This opened up not only possibilities in terms of accurate tumor tracking, dose delivery and adapted treatment planning, but also functional lung imaging. The aim of this study was to show the feasibility of Non-uniform Fourier Decomposition (NuFD) MRI at a 0.35 T MR-Linac as a potential treatment response assessment tool, and propose two signal normalization strategies for enhancing the reproducibility of the results., Methods: Ten healthy volunteers (median age 28 ± 8 years, five female, five male) were repeatedly scanned at a 0.35 T MR-Linac using an optimized 2D+t balanced steady-state free precession (bSSFP) sequence for two coronal slice positions. Image series were acquired in normal free breathing with breaks inside and outside the scanner as well as deep and shallow breathing. Ventilation- and perfusion-weighted maps were generated for each image series using NuFD. For intra-volunteer ventilation map reproducibility, a normalization factor was defined based on the linear correlation of the ventilation signal and diaphragm position of each scan as well as the diaphragm motion amplitude of a reference scan. This allowed for the correction of signal dependency on the diaphragm motion amplitude, which varies with breathing patterns. The second strategy, which can be used for ventilation and perfusion, eliminates the dependency on the signal amplitude by normalizing the ventilation/perfusion maps with the average ventilation/perfusion signal within a selected region-of-interest (ROI). The position and size dependency of this ROI was analyzed. To evaluate the performance of both approaches, the normalized ventilation/perfusion-weighted maps were compared and the deviation of the mean ventilation/perfusion signal from the reference was calculated for each scan. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were performed to test whether the normalization methods can significantly improve the reproducibility of the ventilation/perfusion maps., Results: The ventilation- and perfusion-weighted maps generated with the NuFD algorithm demonstrated a mostly homogenous distribution of signal intensity as expected for healthy volunteers regardless of the breathing maneuver and slice position. Evaluation of the ROI's size and position dependency showed small differences in the performance. Applying both normalization strategies improved the reproducibility of the ventilation by reducing the median deviation of all scans to 9.1%, 5.7% and 8.6% for the diaphragm-based, the best and worst performing ROI-based normalization, respectively, compared to 29.5% for the non-normalized scans. The significance of this improvement was confirmed by the Wilcoxon signed rank test with [Formula: see text] at [Formula: see text]. A comparison of the techniques against each other revealed a significant difference in the performance between best ROI-based normalization and worst ROI ([Formula: see text]) and between best ROI-based normalization and scaling factor ([Formula: see text]), but not between scaling factor and worst ROI ([Formula: see text]). Using the ROI-based approach for the perfusion-maps, the uncorrected deviation of 10.2% was reduced to 5.3%, which was shown to be significant ([Formula: see text])., Conclusions: Using NuFD for non-contrast enhanced functional lung MRI at a 0.35 T MR-Linac is feasible and produces plausible ventilation- and perfusion-weighted maps for volunteers without history of chronic pulmonary diseases utilizing different breathing patterns. The reproducibility of the results in repeated scans significantly benefits from the introduction of the two normalization strategies, making NuFD a potential candidate for fast and robust early treatment response assessment of lung cancer patients during MR-guided radiotherapy., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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10. Diagnostic accuracy of magnetic resonance imaging for the detection of pulmonary nodules simulated in a dedicated porcine chest phantom.
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Bonert M, Schneider M, Solyanik O, Hellbach K, Bondesson D, Gaass T, Thaens N, Ricke J, Benkert T, and Dinkel J
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- Animals, Early Detection of Cancer, Humans, Phantoms, Imaging, Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted methods, Sensitivity and Specificity, Swine, Lung Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging instrumentation, Multiple Pulmonary Nodules diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed instrumentation
- Abstract
Objective: CT serves as gold standard for the evaluation of pulmonary nodules. However, CT exposes patients to ionizing radiation, a concern especially in screening scenarios with repeated examinations. Due to recent technological advances, MRI emerges as a potential alternative for lung imaging using 3D steady state free precession and ultra-short echo-time sequences. Therefore, in this study we assessed the performance of three state-of-the-art MRI sequences for the evaluation of pulmonary nodules., Methods: Lesions of variable sizes were simulated in porcine lungs placed in a dedicated chest phantom mimicking a human thorax, followed by CT and MRI examinations. Two blinded readers evaluated the acquired MR-images locating and measuring every suspect lesion. Using the CT-images as reference, logistic regression was performed to investigate the sensitivity of the tested MRI-sequences for the detection of pulmonary nodules., Results: For nodules with a diameter of 6 mm, all three sequences achieved high sensitivity values above 0.91. However, the sensitivity dropped for smaller nodules, yielding an average of 0.83 for lesions with 4 mm in diameter and less than 0.69 for lesions with 2 mm in diameter. The positive predictive values ranged between 0.91 and 0.96, indicating a low amount of false positive findings. Furthermore, the size measurements done on the MR-images were subject to a bias ranging from 0.83 mm to -1.77 mm with standard deviations ranging from 1.40 mm to 2.11 mm. There was no statistically significant difference between the three tested sequences., Conclusion: While showing promising sensitivity values for lesions larger than 4 mm, MRI appears to be not yet suited for lung cancer screening. Nonetheless, the three tested MRI sequences yielded high positive predictive values and accurate size measurements; therefore, MRI could potentially figure as imaging method of the chest in selected follow-up scenarios, e.g. of incidental findings subject to the Fleischner Criteria., Competing Interests: Thomas Benkert is employed by Siemens Healthcare GmbH. We confirm that this does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
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- 2020
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11. Assessment of intravoxel incoherent motion MRI with an artificial capillary network: analysis of biexponential and phase-distribution models.
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Schneider MJ, Gaass T, Ricke J, Dinkel J, and Dietrich O
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- Models, Biological, Movement, Phantoms, Imaging, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To systematically analyze intravoxel incoherent motion (IVIM) MRI in a perfusable capillary phantom closely matching the geometry of capillary beds in vivo and to compare the validity of the biexponential pseudo-diffusion and the recently introduced phase-distribution IVIM model., Methods: IVIM-MRI was performed at 12 different flow rates ( 0.2 ⋯ 2.4 m L / min ) in a capillary phantom using 4 different DW-MRI sequences (2 with monopolar and 2 with flow-compensated diffusion-gradient schemes, with up to 16 b values between 0 and 800 s / mm 2 ). Resulting parameters from the assessed IVIM models were compared to results from optical microscopy., Results: The acquired data were best described by a static and a flowing compartment modeled by the phase-distribution approach. The estimated signal fraction f of the flowing compartment stayed approximately constant over the applied flow rates, with an average of f = 0.451 ± 0.023 in excellent agreement with optical microscopy ( f = 0.454 ± 0.002 ). The estimated average particle flow speeds v = 0.25 ⋯ 2.7 mm / s showed a highly significant linear correlation to the applied flow. The estimated capillary segment length of approximately 189 u m agreed well with optical microscopy measurements. Using the biexponential model, the signal fraction f was substantially underestimated and displayed a strong dependence on the applied flow rate., Conclusion: The constructed phantom facilitated the detailed investigation of IVIM-MRI methods. The results demonstrate that the phase-distribution method is capable of accurately characterizing fluid flow inside a capillary network. Parameters estimated using the biexponential model, specifically the perfusion fraction f , showed a substantial bias because the model assumptions were not met by the underlying flow pattern., (© 2019 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2019
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12. Nonuniform Fourier-decomposition MRI for ventilation- and perfusion-weighted imaging of the lung.
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Bondesson D, Schneider MJ, Gaass T, Kühn B, Bauman G, Dietrich O, and Dinkel J
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Lung physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Pulmonary Ventilation physiology, Signal-To-Noise Ratio, Fourier Analysis, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Lung diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Perfusion Imaging methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To improve the robustness of pulmonary ventilation- and perfusion-weighted imaging with Fourier decomposition (FD) MRI in the presence of respiratory and cardiac frequency variations by replacing the standard fast Fourier transform with the more general nonuniform Fourier transform., Theory and Methods: Dynamic coronal single-slice MRI of the thorax was performed in 11 patients and 5 healthy volunteers on a 1.5T whole-body scanner using a 2D ultra-fast balanced steady-state free-precession sequence with temporal resolutions of 4-9 images/s. For the proposed nonuniform Fourier-decomposition (NUFD) approach, the original signal with variable physiological frequencies that was acquired with constant sampling rate was retrospectively transformed into a signal with (ventilation or perfusion) frequency-adapted sampling rate. For that purpose, frequency tracking was performed with the synchro-squeezed wavelet transform. Ventilation- and perfusion-weighted NUFD amplitude and signal delay maps were generated and quantitatively compared with regularly sampled FD maps based on their signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)., Results: Volunteers and patients showed statistically significant increases of SNR in frequency-adapted NUFD results compared to regularly sampled FD results. For ventilation data, the mean SNR increased by 43.4 % ± 25.3 % and 24.4 % ± 31.9 % in volunteers and patients, respectively; for perfusion data, SNR increased by 93.0 % ± 36.1 % and 75.6 % ± 62.8 % . Two patients showed perfusion signal in pulmonary areas with NUFD that could not be imaged with FD., Conclusion: This study demonstrates that using nonuniform Fourier transform in combination with frequency tracking can significantly increase SNR and reduce frequency overlaps by collecting the signal intensity onto single frequency bins., (© 2019 The Authors. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine.)
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- 2019
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13. Detection of artificial pulmonary lung nodules in ultralow-dose CT using an ex vivo lung phantom.
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Burgard CA, Gaass T, Bonert M, Bondesson D, Thaens N, Reiser MF, and Dinkel J
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- Animals, Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted, Swine, Disease Models, Animal, Phantoms, Imaging, Radiation Dosage, Solitary Pulmonary Nodule diagnostic imaging, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the image quality of 3 different ultralow-dose CT protocols on pulmonary nodule depiction in a ventilated ex vivo-system., Materials and Methods: Four porcine lungs were inflated inside a dedicated chest phantom and prepared with n = 195 artificial nodules (0.5-1 mL). The artificial chest wall was filled with water to simulate the absorption of a human chest. Images were acquired with a 2x192-row detector CT using low-dose (reference protocol with a tube voltage of 120 kV) and 3 different ULD protocols (respective effective doses: 1mSv and 0.1mSv). A different tube voltage was used for each ULD protocol: 70kV, 100kV with tin filter (100kV_Sn) and 150kV with tin filter (150kV_Sn). Nodule delineation was assessed by two observers (scores 1-5, 1 = unsure, 5 = high confidence)., Results: The diameter of the 195 detected artificial nodules ranged from 0.9-21.5 mm (mean 7.84 mm ± 5.31). The best ULD scores were achieved using 100kV_Sn and 70 kV ULD protocols (4.14 and 4.06 respectively). Both protocols were not significantly different (p = 0.244). The mean score of 3.78 in ULD 150kV_Sn was significantly lower compared to the 100kV_Sn ULD protocol (p = 0.008)., Conclusion: The results of this experiment, conducted in a realistic setting show the feasibility of ultralow-dose CT for the detection of pulmonary nodules.
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- 2018
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14. Technical Note: Quantitative dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI of a 3-dimensional artificial capillary network.
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Gaass T, Schneider MJ, Dietrich O, Ingrisch M, and Dinkel J
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- Contrast Media, Magnetic Resonance Imaging instrumentation, Phantoms, Imaging
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Purpose: Variability across devices, patients, and time still hinders widespread recognition of dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) as quantitative biomarker. The purpose of this work was to introduce and characterize a dedicated microchannel phantom as a model for quantitative DCE-MRI measurements., Methods: A perfusable, MR-compatible microchannel network was constructed on the basis of sacrificial melt-spun sugar fibers embedded in a block of epoxy resin. Structural analysis was performed on the basis of light microscopy images before DCE-MRI experiments. During dynamic acquisition the capillary network was perfused with a standard contrast agent injection system. Flow-dependency, as well as inter- and intrascanner reproducibility of the computed DCE parameters were evaluated using a 3.0 T whole-body MRI., Results: Semi-quantitative and quantitative flow-related parameters exhibited the expected proportionality to the set flow rate (mean Pearson correlation coefficient: 0.991, P < 2.5e-5). The volume fraction was approximately independent from changes of the applied flow rate through the phantom. Repeatability and reproducibility experiments yielded maximum intrascanner coefficients of variation (CV) of 4.6% for quantitative parameters. All evaluated parameters were well in the range of known in vivo results for the applied flow rates., Conclusion: The constructed phantom enables reproducible, flow-dependent, contrast-enhanced MR measurements with the potential to facilitate standardization and comparability of DCE-MRI examinations., (© 2017 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.)
- Published
- 2017
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15. T1 relaxation time constants, influence of oxygen, and the oxygen transfer function of the human lung at 1.5T-A meta-analysis.
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Dietrich O, Gaass T, and Reiser MF
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- Adult, Female, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Lung physiology, Oxygen physiology, Respiration
- Abstract
Purpose: To pool and summarize published data from magnetic resonance longitudinal relaxation measurements of the human lung at 1.5T to provide a reliable basis of T
1 relaxation time constants of healthy lung tissue both under respiration of room air and of pure oxygen. In particular, the oxygen-induced shortening of T1 was evaluated., Materials and Methods: The PubMed database was comprehensively searched up to June 2016 for original publications in English containing quantitative T1 data (at least mean values and standard deviations) of the lung parenchyma of healthy subjects (minimum subject number: 3) at 1.5T. From all included publications, T1 values of the lung of healthy subjects were extracted (inhaling room air and, if available, inhaling pure oxygen). Weighted mean values and standard deviations of all extracted data and the oxygen transfer function (OTF) were calculated., Results: 22 publications were included with a total number of 188 examined healthy subjects. 103 of these subjects (from 13 studies) were examined while breathing pure oxygen and room air; 85 subjects were examined only under room-air conditions. The weighted mean value (weighted sample standard deviation) of the room-air T1 values over all 22 studies was 1196ms (152ms). Based on studies with room-air and oxygen results, the mean T1 value at room-air conditions was 1172ms (161ms); breathing pure oxygen, the mean T1 value was reduced to 1054ms (138 ms). This corresponds to a mean T1 reduction by 118ms (35ms) or 10.0 % (2.3 %) and to a mean OTF value of 1.22 (0.32)×10-3 s-1 /(%O2 )., Conclusion: This meta-analysis with data from 188 subjects indicates that the average T1 relaxation time constant of healthy lung tissue at 1.5T is distributed around 1200ms with a standard deviation of about 150 ms; breathing pure oxygen reduces this value significantly by 10 % to about 1050 ms., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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16. Pulmonary perfusion imaging: Qualitative comparison of TCIR MRI and SPECT/CT in porcine lung.
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Gaass T, Bauman G, Biederer J, Hintze C, Schneider M, and Dinkel J
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- Animals, Feasibility Studies, Female, Lung diagnostic imaging, Models, Animal, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Swine, Lung blood supply, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Multimodal Imaging methods, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Objectives: To validate the anatomical accuracy, homogeneity and sensitivity of two-compartment modeled inversion recovery (TCIR) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in a multimodal animal experiment as a non-invasive alternative to standard functional imaging techniques., Methods: Seven pigs were studied on a 1.5 T whole-body MR scanner and SPECT/CT. The specimens were intubated and maintained in general anesthesia throughout the experiment. TCIR maps of the fractional pulmonary blood volume were compared to dynamic contrast enhanced MRI and SPECT/CT via a region of interest (ROI) based reader study. A comprehensive statistical analysis was performed on the coefficient of variation to evaluate homogeneity properties. Sensitivity was assessed by detecting gravitation dependent perfusion variation and delineation of pathological areas., Results: The fPBV-maps of all examined specimens indicate a superior homogeneity in the computed values (p<1.3×10(-4)). The sensitivity of the TCIR maps to a gravitation effect on the blood distribution was verified and a similar anteroposterior signal and count dependency was observed in DCE MRI and SPECT. Bland-Altman analysis showed no significant intra- or inter-observer difference within the ROI reader study (p>0.06)., Conclusion: Superior information content, significantly higher homogeneity and similar sensitivity of TCIR when compared to DCE and SPECT/CT demonstrated the feasibility of TCIR MRI as an alternative contrast agent-free, non-invasive functional lung imaging approach., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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17. Rapid dynamic radial MRI via reference image enforced histogram constrained reconstruction.
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Gaass T, Bauman G, Potdevin G, Noël PB, and Haase A
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- Algorithms, Artifacts, Heart anatomy & histology, Humans, Image Enhancement methods, Phantoms, Imaging, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted methods, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods
- Abstract
Exploiting spatio-temporal redundancies in sub-Nyquist sampled dynamic MRI for the suppression of undersampling artifacts was shown to be of great success. However, temporally averaged and blurred structures in image space composite data poses the risk of false information in the reconstruction. Within this work we assess the possibility of employing the composite image histogram as a measure of undersampling artifacts and as basis of their suppression. The proposed algorithm utilizes a histogram, computed from a composite image within a dynamically acquired interleaved radial MRI measurement as reference to compensate for the impact of undersampling in temporally resolved data without the incorporation of temporal averaging. In addition an image space regularization utilizing a single frame low-resolution reconstruction is implemented to enforce overall contrast fidelity. The performance of the approach was evaluated on a simulated radial dynamic MRI acquisition and on two functional in vivo radial cardiac acquisitions. Results demonstrate that the algorithm maintained contrast properties, details and temporal resolution in the images, while effectively suppressing undersampling artifacts., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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18. Pulmonary functional imaging: qualitative comparison of Fourier decomposition MR imaging with SPECT/CT in porcine lung.
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Bauman G, Lützen U, Ullrich M, Gaass T, Dinkel J, Elke G, Meybohm P, Frerichs I, Hoffmann B, Borggrefe J, Knuth HC, Schupp J, Prüm H, Eichinger M, Puderbach M, Biederer J, and Hintze C
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Lung diagnostic imaging, Sodium Pertechnetate Tc 99m, Statistics, Nonparametric, Swine, Technetium Tc 99m Aggregated Albumin, Lung anatomy & histology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon methods, Tomography, X-Ray Computed methods
- Abstract
Purpose: To compare unenhanced lung ventilation-weighted (VW) and perfusion-weighted (QW) imaging based on Fourier decomposition (FD) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging with the clinical reference standard single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)/computed tomography (CT) in an animal experiment., Materials and Methods: The study was approved by the local animal care committee. Lung ventilation and perfusion was assessed in seven anesthetized pigs by using a 1.5-T MR imager and SPECT/CT. For time-resolved FD MR imaging, sets of lung images were acquired by using an untriggered two-dimensional balanced steady-state free precession sequence (repetition time, 1.9 msec; echo time, 0.8 msec; acquisition time per image, 118 msec; acquisition rate, 3.33 images per second; flip angle, 75°; section thickness, 12 mm; matrix, 128 × 128). Breathing displacement was corrected with nonrigid image registration. Parenchymal signal intensity was analyzed pixelwise with FD to separate periodic changes of proton density induced by respiration and periodic changes of blood flow. Spectral lines representing respiratory and cardiac frequencies were integrated to calculate VW and QW images. Ventilation and perfusion SPECT was performed after inhalation of dispersed technetium 99m ((99m)Tc) and injection of (99m)Tc-labeled macroaggregated albumin. FD MR imaging and SPECT data were independently analyzed by two physicians in consensus. A regional statistical analysis of homogeneity and pathologic signal changes was performed., Results: Images acquired in healthy animals by using FD MR imaging and SPECT showed a homogeneous distribution of VW and QW imaging and pulmonary ventilation and perfusion, respectively. The gravitation-dependent signal distribution of ventilation and perfusion in all animals was similarly observed at FD MR imaging and SPECT. Incidental ventilation and perfusion defects were identically visualized by using both modalities., Conclusion: This animal experiment demonstrated qualitative agreement in the assessment of regional lung ventilation and perfusion between contrast media-free and radiation-free FD MR imaging and conventional SPECT/CT., (© RSNA, 2011.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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