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BOLD MRI of human tumor oxygenation during carbogen breathing

✍ Scribed by N. Jane Taylor; Hiram Baddeley; Kate A. Goodchild; Melanie E. B. Powell; Michelle Thoumine; Linda A. Culver; J. James Stirling; Michele I. Saunders; Peter J. Hoskin; Heather Phillips; Anwar R. Padhani; John R. Griffiths


Book ID
102373554
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
221 KB
Volume
14
Category
Article
ISSN
1053-1807

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

An MRI method is described for demonstrating improved oxygenation of human tumors and normal tissues during carbogen inhalation (95% O~2~, 5% CO~2~). T‐weighted gradient‐echo imaging was performed before, during, and after carbogen breathing in 47 tumor patients and 13 male volunteers. Analysis of artifacts and signal intensity was performed. Thirty‐six successful tumor examinations were obtained. Twenty showed significant whole‐tumor signal increases (mean 21.0%, range 6.5–82.4%), and one decreased (−26.5 ± 8.0%). Patterns of signal change were heterogeneous in responding tumors. Five of 13 normal prostate glands (four volunteers and nine patients with nonprostatic tumors) showed significant enhancement (mean 11.4%, range 8.4–14.0%). An increase in brain signal was seen in 11 of 13 assessable patients (mean 8.0 ± 3.7%, range 5.0–11.7%). T‐weighted tumor MRI during carbogen breathing is possible in humans. High failure rates occurred due to respiratory distress. Significant enhancement was seen in 56%, suggesting improved tissue oxygenation and blood flow, which could identify these patients as more likely to benefit from carbogen radiosensitization. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;14:156–163. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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