| Literature DB >> 34848953 |
Mu He1, Kun Qing2,3, Nicholas J Tustison2, Zach Beaulac4, Tabitha W King5, Thomas B Huff5, Mikell Paige4, Kranthikiran Earasi1, Roselove Nunoo-Asare1, Sarah Struchen2, Marie Burdick1, Zhimin Zhang1, Alan Ropp2, Grady W Miller2, James T Patrie6, Jaime F Mata2, John P Mugler2, Yun Michael Shim1,2.
Abstract
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34848953 PMCID: PMC8627248 DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S324388
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Chron Obstruct Pulmon Dis ISSN: 1176-9106
Figure 1Representative ventilation and gas-exchange MRI with quantitative maps for a healthy control (FEV1% =103%, FVC%=109%) and an asymptomatic e-cigarette user (FEV1% =104%, FVC%=106%, %DLCO=103%). The first row shows ventilation scans (brighter appearance represents better-ventilated areas). For the quantitative ventilation maps (second row) of the young, healthy control vs the e-cigarette subject, VDP (areas without any ventilation) was 1% vs 1%. The third through fifth rows show the three gas-exchange ratios: Tissue-to-Gas (T/G, third row), RBC-to-Gas (R/G, fourth row), and RBC-to-Tissue (R/T, fifth row) ratios, where red indicates low gas exchange and yellow indicates high gas exchange. For the quantitative gas exchange maps of the young, healthy control vs the e-cigarette subject, T/G ratio was 1.11% vs 0.84%, R/G ratio 0.36% vs 0.34%, and R/T ratio 0.32 vs 0.41.
Figure 2(A–D) Comparison of quantitative ventilation and gas-exchange MRI results between young e-cigarette subjects (n=5) and age-matched healthy controls (n=10). Compared to healthy controls, e-cigarette subjects demonstrated significantly decreased Tissue-to-Gas ratio (p=0.04) and significantly elevated RBC-to-Tissue ratio (p=0.0007). P values were generated by the Mann–Whitney t-test.