Purpose: To compare in vivo lung morphometry parameters derived from theoretical gas diffusion models, the cylinder model and stretched exponential model, in a range of acinar microstructural length scales encountered in healthy and diseased lungs with He and Xe diffusion-weighted MRI.
Methods: Three-dimensional multiple b-value He and Xe diffusion-weighted MRI was acquired with compressed sensing at 1.5 T from 51 and 31 subjects, respectively, including healthy volunteers, ex-smokers, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients. For each subject, the stretched exponential model-derived mean diffusive length scale (Lm ) was calculated from the diffusion signal decay, and was compared with the cylinder model-derived mean chord length (Lm) and mean alveolar diameter (L ) in order to determine the relationships among the different lung morphometry parameters.
Results: For both He and Xe diffusion-weighted MRI, the mean global Lm value was significantly related (P < .001) to Lm in a nonlinear power relationship, whereas the L demonstrated excellent linear correlation (P < .001) with Lm . A mean bias of +1.0% and 2.6% toward Lm was obtained for Bland-Altman analyses of He and Xe Lm and L values, suggesting that the two morphometric parameters are equivalent measures of mean acinar dimensions.
Conclusion: Within the experimental range of parameters considered here for both He and Xe, the stretched exponential model-derived Lm is related nonlinearly to cylinder model-derived Lm, and demonstrates excellent agreement with the cylinder model-derived L .
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mrm.27608 | DOI Listing |
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