Abstract

To assess the feasibility of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for postnatal assessment of pulmonary vascularity in infants with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH). Infants with prenatally diagnosed CDH (n=24) received postnatal pulmonary MRI. Infants with nonpulmonary birth defects served as controls (n=5). Semiautomatic segmentation was performed to obtain total vascular volume using time of flight images to assess vascularity. Average vascular density (vascular volume/lung volume) in control infants was 0.23±0.06mm3/mm3 compared with 0.18±0.06mm3/mm3 in infants with CDH is (P=.09). When stratified further based on CDH severity, the difference between control infants and moderate CDH group was statistically significant. (0.23mm3/mm3 vs 0.15mm3/mm3, P=.01). Ipsilateral vascular density on MRI in infants with CDH significantly correlated with the prenatal pulmonary hypertensive index (P=.0004, Spearman R=+0.87) and with number of days on mechanical ventilation (P=.04, Spearman R=-0.44), total days on inhaled nitric oxide (P=.02, Spearman R=-0.47), use of epoprostenol for acute pulmonary hypertension (PH) (0.14mm3/mm3 vs 0.20mm3/mm3, P=.005), and use of sildenafil for chronic PH (0.15mm3/mm3 vs 0.19mm3/mm3, P=.03). Our results suggest that postnatal pulmonary vascularity assessed by MRI strongly correlates with prenatal and postnatal markers of PH severity and that pulmonary vascularity may serve as a direct measure of pulmonary vascular hypoplasia in infants with CDH.

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