Diffusion and perfusion MRI of the lung and mediastinum.

Thomas Henzler, Gerald Schmid-Bindert, Stefan O Schoenberg, Christian Fink

Institute of Clinical Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University Medical Center Mannheim, Medical Faculty Mannheim - Heidelberg University, Germany.

Journal Article: European journal of radiology (impact factor: 2.65). 12/2010; 76(3):329-36. DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2010.05.005

Abstract

With ongoing technical improvements such as multichannel MRI, systems with powerful gradients as well as the development of innovative pulse sequence techniques implementing parallel imaging, MRI has now entered the stage of a radiation-free alternative to computed tomography (CT) for chest imaging in clinical practice. Whereas in the past MRI of the lung was focused on morphological aspects, current MRI techniques also enable functional imaging of the lung allowing for a comprehensive assessment of lung disease in a single MRI exam. Perfusion imaging can be used for the visualization of regional pulmonary perfusion in patients with different lung diseases such as lung cancer, chronic obstructive lung disease, pulmonary embolism or for the prediction of postoperative lung function in lung cancer patients. Over the past years diffusion-weighted MR imaging (DW-MRI) of the thorax has become feasible with a significant reduction of the acquisition time, thus minimizing artifacts from respiratory and cardiac motion. In chest imaging, DW-MRI has been mainly suggested for the characterization of lung cancer, lymph nodes and pulmonary metastases. In this review article recent MR perfusion and diffusion techniques of the lung and mediastinum as well as their clinical applications are reviewed.

Source: PubMed

Comments on this publication

ResearchGate members can add comments. Sign up now and post your comment!

Similar publications

Science & Research Jobs

Keywords

acquisition time
 
chest imaging
 
chronic obstructive lung disease
 
clinical practice
 
comprehensive assessment
 
current MRI techniques
 
DW-MRI
 
functional imaging
 
innovative pulse sequence techniques
 
lung cancer patients
 
lymph nodes
 
multichannel MRI
 
parallel imaging
 
Perfusion imaging
 
postoperative lung function
 
pulmonary embolism
 
radiation-free alternative
 
review article recent MR perfusion
 
single MRI exam
 
years diffusion-weighted MR imaging