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Radiology, Vol 189, 699-701, Copyright © 1993 by Radiological Society of North America


ARTICLES

Quantitative differential pulmonary perfusion: MR imaging versus radionuclide lung scanning

JM Silverman, PJ Julien, RJ Herfkens and NJ Pelc
Department of Radiology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90048.

PURPOSE: To compare the results of quantitative analysis of differential pulmonary artery blood flow performed with phase-contrast cine magnetic resonance (MR) images with those of differential radionuclide pulmonary perfusion scanning in preoperative lung transplantation patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Forty preoperative lung transplantation patients underwent prospective, quantitative analysis of differential pulmonary artery blood flow performed with MR imaging and radionuclide pulmonary perfusion scanning. MR imaging analysis was performed at 1.5 T with a phase-contrast cine pulse sequence to acquire data perpendicular to each central pulmonary artery. RESULTS: Comparative analysis of differential pulmonary perfusion showed excellent correlation between the two modalities in all patients (P = .0001). MR imaging enabled calculation of the pulmonary artery blood flow to each lung; radionuclide lung scanning enabled only calculation of relative perfusion to each lung. CONCLUSION: MR imaging is as effective as radionuclide lung scanning in assessment of relative, and superior for determination of absolute differential, pulmonary perfusion.


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