Recirculation of inhaled xenon does not alter lung CT density.
Publication/Presentation Date
1-1-2007
Abstract
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Xenon-enhanced computed tomography (Xe-CT) measures regional ventilation from changes in lung parenchymal CT density during the multibreath washin/washout of inhaled Xe gas. Because Xe is moderately soluble, vascular uptake and redistribution has been proposed as a confounding phenomenon. We propose that the redistribution of Xe via the circulation is negligible, and correction is unwarranted.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Unilateral ventilation with 60% Xe was performed in intubated canines. Whole-lung CT images were obtained at baseline and after 1 and 5 minutes of unilateral Xe ventilation. Comparisons between blocked (B) and Xe ventilated (V) whole lung densities were made. Density of paraspinous muscle and blood (aorta, inferior vena cava) were also compared.
RESULTS: The density of lung tissue in the V lungs increased significantly compared to B lungs after 1 minute (B -688.5 +/- 54.3 Hounsfield units [HU] vs. V -535.4 +/- 55.6 HU, P < .05) and 5 minutes (B -689.1 +/- 52.2 HU vs. V -492.9 +/- 89.1 HU, P < .05) of Xe ventilation. The density in the blocked lungs did not significantly change after either 1 or 5 minutes of ventilation with Xe. Although density tended to increase with time in the blood and muscle, the change only reached significance in muscle at 5 minutes.
CONCLUSIONS: Five minutes of ventilation with a high concentration of Xe does not cause measurable density changes in the contralateral, unventilated lung. Xe accumulation in muscle tissue limits redistribution. Correction of Xe-CT time series density data may be unnecessary.
Volume
14
Issue
1
First Page
81
Last Page
84
ISSN
1076-6332
Published In/Presented At
Hoag, J. B., Fuld, M., Brown, R. H., & Simon, B. A. (2007). Recirculation of inhaled xenon does not alter lung CT density. Academic radiology, 14(1), 81–84. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acra.2006.10.012
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
17178369
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article