Reduction of pulmonary compliance found with high-resolution computed tomography in irradiated mice
2007; Elsevier BV; Volume: 67; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.ijrobp.2006.10.037
ISSN1879-355X
AutoresThomas Guerrero, Richard Castillo, Josue Noyola-Martinez, Mylin A. Torres, Xinhui Zhou, Rudy Guerra, Dianna D. Cody, Ritsuko Komaki, Elizabeth Travis,
Tópico(s)Thermal Regulation in Medicine
ResumoTo demonstrate that high-resolution computed tomography (CT) can be used to quantify loss of pulmonary compliance in irradiated mice.Computed tomography images of three nonirradiated (controls) and three irradiated mice were obtained 200 days after a single dose of 16-Gy Co (60) thoracic irradiation. While intubated, each animal was imaged at static breath-hold pressures of 2, 10, and 18 cm H2O. A deformable image registration algorithm was used to calculate changes in air volume between adjacent-pressure CT image pairs (e.g., 2 and 10 cm H2O), and functional images of pulmonary compliance were generated. The mass-specific compliance was calculated as the change in volume divided by the pressure difference between the 2 image sets and the mass of lung tissue.For the irradiated mice, the lung parenchyma mean CT values ranged from -314 (+/- 11) Hounsfield units (HU) to -378 (+/- 11) HU. For the control mice, the mean CT values ranged from -549 (+/- 11) HU to -633 (+/- 11) HU. Irradiated mice had a 60% (45, 74%; 95% confidence interval) lower mass-specific compliance than did the controls (0.039 [+/- 0.0038] vs. 0.106 [+/- 0.0038] mL air per cm H2O per g lung) from the 2-cm to 10-cm H2O CT image pair. The difference in compliance between groups was less pronounced at the higher distending pressures.High-resolution CT was used to quantify a reduction in mass-specific compliance following whole lung irradiation in mice. This small animal radiation injury model and assay may be useful in the study of lung injury.
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