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Assessment of regional ventilation and deformation using 4D-CT imaging for healthy human lungs during tidal breathing
Author(s) -
Nariman Jahani,
Sanghun Choi,
Jiwoong Choi,
Krishna Iyer,
Eric A. Hoffman,
ChingLong Lin
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of applied physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 8750-7587
pISSN - 1522-1601
DOI - 10.1152/japplphysiol.00339.2015
Subject(s) - ventilation (architecture) , exhalation , tidal volume , breathing , lung volumes , functional residual capacity , medicine , mechanical ventilation , lung , nuclear medicine , biomedical engineering , anesthesia , respiratory system , anatomy , physics , meteorology
This study aims to assess regional ventilation, nonlinearity, and hysteresis of human lungs during dynamic breathing via image registration of four-dimensional computed tomography (4D-CT) scans. Six healthy adult humans were studied by spiral multidetector-row CT during controlled tidal breathing as well as during total lung capacity and functional residual capacity breath holds. Static images were utilized to contrast static vs. dynamic (deep vs. tidal) breathing. A rolling-seal piston system was employed to maintain consistent tidal breathing during 4D-CT spiral image acquisition, providing required between-breath consistency for physiologically meaningful reconstructed respiratory motion. Registration-derived variables including local air volume and anisotropic deformation index (ADI, an indicator of preferential deformation in response to local force) were employed to assess regional ventilation and lung deformation. Lobar distributions of air volume change during tidal breathing were correlated with those of deep breathing (R(2) ≈ 0.84). Small discrepancies between tidal and deep breathing were shown to be likely due to different distributions of air volume change in the left and the right lungs. We also demonstrated an asymmetric characteristic of flow rate between inhalation and exhalation. With ADI, we were able to quantify nonlinearity and hysteresis of lung deformation that can only be captured in dynamic images. Nonlinearity quantified by ADI is greater during inhalation, and it is stronger in the lower lobes (P < 0.05). Lung hysteresis estimated by the difference of ADI between inhalation and exhalation is more significant in the right lungs than that in the left lungs.

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