Jim M. Wild1, Salma Ajraoui1,
Martin H. Deppe1, Steven R. Parnell1, Helen Marshall1,
James Swinscoe2, Matthew Hatton2, Juan Parra-Robles1,
Rob H. Ireland1
1Academic Radiology, University of
Sheffield, Sheffield, Yorkshire, United Kingdom; 2Weston Park
Hopital, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Combined
1H MRI of lung anatomy with hyperpolarised gas MRI of lung function has previously
required acquisition of separate breath-hold exams, with separate MRI pulse
sequences and dedicated RF coils, resulting in images that were not spatially
registered or temporally synchronised. Here 1H anatomical and 3He ventilation
MRI from human lungs were acquired in the same breath-hold using decoupled RF
hardware and optimised dual acquisition MRI pulse sequences. The resulting
3He and 1H images acquired in the same breath (from volunteers and patients
with lung disease), showed superior registration to those acquired in repeat
breath-hold manoeuvres.