Title

MRI for Non-Invasive Imaging in Neonates and Children
MRI as a Means to Measure Lung Function: Non-Invasive Imaging in Neonates and Young Children
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Intervention/Treatment

    helium-3 ...
  • Study Participants

    45
The purpose of this study is to develop rapid MRI techniques for imaging the lung with hyperpolarized helium-3 gas as an inhaled contrast agent. These techniques will be piloted in adults and older children before testing them in younger children and infants. The purpose is to enable imaging of non-sedated infants by imaging so fast as to freeze motion.
he purpose of this study is to further develop the techniques to permit the imaging of infant lungs with hyperpolarized helium-3 MRI including techniques for acquisition in free breathing infants and infants on a ventilator. We have developed fast imaging techniques and obtained proof-of-concept data in infants as young as 2 months old. Many pediatric lung diseases including CF, bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) and asthma have their origins in infancy so it would be desirable to be able to image infants with hyperpolarized gas MRI. We focused on developing fast imaging techniques to, in essence, freeze lung motion in non-sedated infants. We feel the technique will be more widely adopted if clinically useful images can be obtained without sedating the infant. Some very rapid imaging techniques have been developed for conventional proton MRI for applications such as cardiac MRI that require very short acquisition time. We modified these techniques for use in hyperpolarized gas MRI and developed a technique that permits the acquisition of the entire lung volume of an infant in less than 1 second. These techniques would also be useful for imaging infants who are still on a ventilator with the hope of increasing our understanding of lung development and neonatal lung disease.
Study Started
Jan 01
2011
Primary Completion
Jun 30
2018
Study Completion
Jul 30
2018
Results Posted
Apr 19
2022
Last Update
Apr 19
2022

Drug Hyperpolarized Helium-3 MRI of the chest

hyperpolarized helium-3 is an inhaled gaseous contrast agent for MRI and permits the acquisition of high quality imagined of lung ventilation.

Hyperpolarized Helium 3 MRI of the chest Experimental

Using hyperpolarized helium-3 as an inhaled contrast agent for MRI, we will assess the lung ventilation.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

MRI sequence development (n=40): Healthy subjects and patients with CF, BPD, or asthma will be used in the development of the rapid imaging techniques. These subjects will be age 4 months to 65 years old. Healthy subjects can have no history of chronic respiratory disease. The subjects with CF or asthma must have a physician diagnosis of their respective disease.
Proof-of-Concept Study (n=30): Ten healthy infants,10 infants with CF, and 10 infants with BPD age 4-24 months will be imaged in the proof-of-concept study. Healthy infant must have had an uncomplicated term birth and have no history of chronic respiratory symptoms. The patients with CF must have a physician diagnosis of CF and be at their baseline clinical status on the day of imaging.

Exclusion Criteria:

Any condition for which a MRI procedure is contraindicated.
Presence of any non-MRI compatible metallic material in the body, such as pacemakers, metallic clips, etc.
Likelihood of claustrophobia
Chest circumference greater than that of the helium magnetic resonance (MR) coil.
Pregnancy, by report of subject. Clinically in the Department of Radiology at UVA, self report is used when screening patients for MR scans as well as CT scans and fluoroscopy studies. If the subject reports there is any chance of their being pregnant a urine pregnancy test will be performed prior to any imaging.

Summary

Hyperpolarized Helium 3 MRI of the Chest

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term Hyperpolarized Helium 3 MRI of the Chest

Ventilation Defects as Seen on Hyperpolarized Helium-3 MRI

On hyperpolarized helium-3 MRI, well ventilated areas of the lung appear bright and poorly ventilated areas appear dark. The poorly ventilated areas are called ventilation defects. Human readers looked at the hyperpolarized helium-3 MR images and determined whether the lungs had: No Defects, Small Defects, or Large Defects.

Hyperpolarized Helium 3 MRI of the Chest

Age, Continuous

5.5
years (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 5.0

Race (NIH/OMB)

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Hyperpolarized Helium 3 MRI of the Chest