Two-dimensional and three-dimensional oxygen mapping by 3He-MRI validation in a lung phantom

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to validate oxygen-sensitive 3He-MRI in noninvasive determination of the regional, two- and three-dimensional distribution of oxygen partial pressure. In a gas-filled elastic silicon ventilation bag used as a lung phantom, oxygen sensitive two- and three-dimensional 3He-MRI measurements were performed at different oxygen concentrations which had been equilibrated in a range of normal and pathologic values. The oxygen partial pressure distribution was determined from 3He-MRI using newly developed software allowing for mapping of oxygen partial pressure. The reference bulk oxygen partial pressure inside the phantom was measured by conventional respiratory gas analysis. In two-dimensional measurements, image-based and gas-analysis results correlated with r=0.98; in three-dimensional measurements the between-methods correlation coefficient was r=0.89. The signal-to-noise ratio of three-dimensional measurements was about half of that of two-dimensional measurements and became critical (below 3) in some data sets. Oxygen-sensitive 3He-MRI allows for noninvasive determination of the two- and three-dimensional distribution of oxygen partial pressure in gas-filled airspaces. © Springer-Verlag 2005.

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Gast, K. K., Schreiber, W. G., Herweling, A., Lehmann, F., Erdös, G., Schmiedeskamp, J., … Eberle, B. (2005). Two-dimensional and three-dimensional oxygen mapping by 3He-MRI validation in a lung phantom. European Radiology, 15(9), 1915–1922. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-005-2778-x

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