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Abstract #0204

Lung Imaging in the Mouse with SWIFT

Curtis Andrew Corum1,2, Djaudat Idiyatullin1, Steen Moeller1, Ryan Chamberlain1, Deepali Sachdev2,3, Michael Garwood1,2

1Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Dept. of Radiology, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States; 2Masonic Cancer Center, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States; 3Department of Medicine, Medical School, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, United States


Lung and especially lung parenchyma are especially difficult to image with MRI. T2* times are in the sub-millisecond range and may require specialized hardware and methods to for optimum visualization or quantitative information. Many lung pathologies such as inflamation (asthma), primary and metastatic neoplasms (cancer) would benefit from more robust and higher SNR methodologies. SWIFT is a recently developed 3D radial imaging sequence, sensitive to ultra-short T2 and T2* signals. We demonstrate for the first time, free breathing prospectively gated 1H SWIFT images of the mouse lung. Lung parenchyma has significant signal and information content while bronchi appear dark.