Abstract

To implement and characterize a single-breath xenon transfer contrast (SB-XTC) method to assess the fractional diffusive gas transport F in the lung: to study the dependence of F and its uniformity as a function of lung volume; to estimate local alveolar surface area per unit gas volume S(A)/V(Gas) from multiple diffusion time measurements of F; to evaluate the reproducibility of the measurements and the necessity of B(1) correction in cases of centric and sequential encoding. In SB-XTC three or four gradient echo images separated by inversion/saturation pulses were collected during a breath-hold in eight healthy volunteers, allowing the mapping of F (thus S(A)/V(Gas)) and correction for other contributions such as T(1) relaxation, RF depletion and B(1) inhomogeneity from inherently registered data. Regional values of F and its distribution were obtained; both the mean value and heterogeneity of F increased with the decrease of lung volume. Higher values of F in the bases of the lungs in supine position were observed at lower volumes in all volunteers. Local S(A)/V(Gas) (with a mean ± standard deviation of S(A)/V(Gas) = 89 ± 30 cm(-1)) was estimated in vivo near functional residual capacity. Calibration of SB-XTC on phantoms highlighted the necessity for B(1) corrections when k-space is traversed sequentially; with centric ordering B(1) distribution correction is dispensable. The SB-XTC technique is implemented and validated for in vivo measurements of local S(A)/V(Gas).

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