ZusammenfassungHintergrundDas viszerale oder mittlere Mediastinum umfasst nichtvaskuläre (Trachea, Karina, Ösophagus, Lymphknoten) und vaskuläre Strukturen (Herz, Aorta ascendens, Aortenbogen, Aorta ...descendens, Vena cava superior, intraperikardiale Pulmonalarterien, Ductus thoracicus).Ziel der ArbeitVerschiedenen Pathologien des viszeralen Mediastinums und der Bildgebungsmöglichkeiten werden dargestellt.Material und MethodenDie Röntgen-Übersichtsaufnahme kann in der Regel nur Hinweise auf eine Pathologie liefern, allerdings wenig zur Abklärung beitragen. Dies bleibt den (funktionellen) Schnittbildverfahren Computertomographie (CT), Magnetresonanztomographie (MRT) und Positronen-Emissions-Tomographie (PET) überlassen. Mit diesen Verfahren lassen sich die Läsionen des mittleren Mediastinums gut abgrenzen und charakterisieren.DiskussionIn diesem Artikel werden die häufigsten Läsionen des mittleren Mediastinums systematisch dargestellt und besprochen.
The knowledge of frequency and temperature dependent dielectric properties of tissue is essential to develop ultra-wideband diagnostic technologies, such as a non-invasive temperature monitoring ...system during hyperthermia treatment. To this end, we characterized the dielectric properties of animal liver, muscle, fat and blood in the microwave frequency range from 0.5 GHz to 7 GHz and in the temperature range between 30 °C and 50 °C. The measured data were modeled to a two-pole Cole-Cole model and a second-order polynomial was introduced to fit the Cole-Cole parameters as a function of temperature. The parametric model provides access to the dielectric properties of tissue at any frequency and temperature in the specified range.
Lung imaging Ley, Sebastian
European respiratory review
24, Številka:
136
Journal Article
Recenzirano
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Imaging of the lung is a mainstay of respiratory medicine. It provides local information about morphology and function of the lung parenchyma that is unchallenged by other noninvasive techniques. ...During the 2014 European Respiratory Society International Congress in Munich, Germany, a Clinical Year in Review session was held focusing on the latest developments in pulmonary imaging. This review summarises some of the main findings of peer-reviewed articles that were published in the 12-month period prior to the 2014 International Congress.
Studies demonstrating early structural lung damage in infants and preschool children with cystic fibrosis (CF) suggest that noninvasive monitoring will be important to identify patients who may ...benefit from early therapeutic intervention. Previous studies demonstrated that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detects structural and functional abnormalities in lungs from older patients with CF without radiation exposure.
To evaluate the potential of MRI to detect abnormal lung structure and perfusion in infants and preschool children with CF, and to monitor the response to therapy for pulmonary exacerbation.
MRI studies were performed in 50 children with CF (age, 3.1 ± 2.1 yr; range, 0-6 yr) in stable clinical condition (n = 40) or pulmonary exacerbation before and after antibiotic treatment (n = 10), and in 26 non-CF control subjects (age, 2.9 ± 1.9 yr). T1- and T2-weighted sequences before and after intravenous contrast and first-pass perfusion imaging were acquired, and assessed on the basis of a dedicated morphofunctional score.
MRI demonstrated bronchial wall thickening/bronchiectasis, mucus plugging, and perfusion deficits from the first year of life in most stable patients with CF (global score, 10.0 ± 4.0), but not in non-CF control subjects (score, 0.0 ± 0.0; P < 0.001). In patients with exacerbations, the global MRI score was increased to 18.0 ± 2.0 (P < 0.001), and was significantly reduced to 12.0 ± 3.0 (P < 0.05) after antibiotic therapy.
MRI detected abnormalities in lung structure and perfusion, and response to therapy for exacerbations in infants and preschool children with CF. These results support the development of MRI for noninvasive monitoring and as an end point in interventional trials for early CF lung disease. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT00760071).
Magnetic nanoparticles have been investigated for microwave imaging over the last decade. The use of functionalized magnetic nanoparticles, which are able to accumulate selectively within tumorous ...tissue, can increase the diagnostic reliability. This paper deals with the detecting and imaging of magnetic nanoparticles by means of ultra-wideband microwave sensing via pseudo-noise technology. The investigations were based on phantom measurements. In the first experiment, we analyzed the detectability of magnetic nanoparticles depending on the magnetic field intensity of the polarizing magnetic field, as well as the viscosity of the target and the surrounding medium in which the particles were embedded, respectively. The results show a nonlinear behavior of the magnetic nanoparticle response depending on the magnetic field intensity for magnetic nanoparticles diluted in distilled water and for magnetic nanoparticles embedded in a solid medium. Furthermore, the maximum amplitude of the magnetic nanoparticles responses varies for the different surrounding materials of the magnetic nanoparticles. In the second experiment, we investigated the influence of the target position on the three-dimensional imaging of the magnetic nanoparticles in a realistic measurement setup for breast cancer imaging. The results show that the magnetic nanoparticles can be detected successfully. However, the intensity of the particles in the image depends on its position due to the path-dependent attenuation, the inhomogeneous microwave illumination of the breast, and the inhomogeneity of the magnetic field. Regarding the last point, we present an approach to compensate for the inhomogeneity of the magnetic field by computing a position-dependent correction factor based on the measured magnetic field intensity and the magnetic susceptibility of the magnetic particles. Moreover, the results indicate an influence of the polarizing magnetic field on the measured ultra-wideband signals even without magnetic nanoparticles. Such a disturbing influence of the polarizing magnetic field on the measurements should be reduced for a robust magnetic nanoparticles detection. Therefore, we analyzed the two-state (ON/OFF) and the sinusoidal modulation of the external magnetic field concerning the detectability of the magnetic nanoparticles with respect to these spurious effects, as well as their practical application.
Wideband microwave imaging is of interest wherever optical opaque scenarios need to be analyzed, as these waves can penetrate biological tissues, many building materials, or industrial materials. One ...of the challenges of microwave imaging is the computation of the image from the measurement data because of the need to solve extensive inverse scattering problems due to the sometimes complicated wave propagation. The inversion problem simplifies if only spatially limited objects-point objects, in the simplest case-with temporally variable scattering properties are of interest. Differential imaging uses this time variance by observing the scenario under test over a certain time interval. Such problems exist in medical diagnostics, in the search for surviving earthquake victims, monitoring of the vitality of persons, detection of wood pests, control of industrial processes, and much more. This paper gives an overview of imaging methods for point-like targets and discusses the impact of target variations onto the radar data. Because the target variations are very weak in many applications, a major issue of differential imaging concerns the suppression of random effects by appropriate data processing and concepts of radar hardware. The paper introduces related methods and approaches, and some applications illustrate their performance.
Magnetic nanoparticle-aided microwave imaging is recently gaining an increasing interest as a potential tool for breast cancer diagnostics. This is due to the peculiar features of magnetic ...nanoparticles, which are biocompatible, can be selectively targeted to the tumor, and may change their microwave magnetic response when modulated by a polarizing magnetic field. This latter aspect is particularly appealing, as it enables the physical separation of the microwave signal due the malignancy, targeted by the nanoparticles, from that due to healthy tissue. This increases the specificity of the diagnostic tool, in principle allowing a diagnosis based solely on the detection of the signal due to the nanoparticles response. In this respect, a proper choice of the polarizing field modulation can remarkably increase the detection performances. This paper deals with this issue, by providing the mathematical framework for such an optimization and a procedure for estimating the required quantities from a set of proper measurements. The procedure is then experimentally demonstrated by applying it to a recently developed ultrawideband radar system for the magnetic nanoparticle-aided detection of breast cancer. For such a system, the optimal magnetic field modulation is determined.
The knowledge of temperature distribution inside the tissue to be treated is essential for patient safety, workflow and clinical outcomes of thermal therapies. Microwave imaging represents a ...promising approach for non-invasive tissue temperature monitoring during hyperthermia treatment. In the present paper, a methodology for quantitative non-invasive tissue temperature estimation based on ultra-wideband (UWB) radar imaging in the microwave frequency range is described. The capabilities of the proposed method are demonstrated by experiments with liquid phantoms and three-dimensional (3D) Delay-and-Sum beamforming algorithms. The results of our investigation show that the methodology can be applied for detection and estimation of the temperature induced dielectric properties change.
Monitoring of regional lung function in interventional COPD trials requires alternative endpoints beyond global parameters such as FEV1. T1 relaxation times of the lung might allow to draw ...conclusions on tissue composition, blood volume and oxygen fraction. The aim of this study was to evaluate the potential value of lung Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with native and oxygen-enhanced T1 mapping for the assessment of COPD patients in comparison with contrast enhanced perfusion MRI.
20 COPD patients (GOLD I-IV) underwent a coronal 2-dimensional inversion recovery snapshot flash sequence (8 slices/lung) at room air and during inhalation of pure oxygen, as well as dynamic contrast-enhanced first-pass perfusion imaging. Regional distribution of T1 at room air (T1), oxygen-induced T1 shortening (ΔT1) and peak enhancement were rated by 2 chest radiologists in consensus using a semi-quantitative 3-point scale in a zone-based approach.
Abnormal T1 and ΔT1 were highly prevalent in the patient cohort. T1 and ΔT1 correlated positively with perfusion abnormalities (r = 0.81 and r = 0.80; p&0.001), and with each other (r = 0.80; p<0.001). In GOLD stages I and II ΔT1 was normal in 16/29 lung zones with mildly abnormal perfusion (15/16 with abnormal T1). The extent of T1 (r = 0.45; p<0.05), ΔT1 (r = 0.52; p<0.05) and perfusion abnormalities (r = 0.52; p<0.05) showed a moderate correlation with GOLD stage.
Native and oxygen-enhanced T1 mapping correlated with lung perfusion deficits and severity of COPD. Under the assumption that T1 at room air correlates with the regional pulmonary blood pool and that oxygen-enhanced T1 reflects lung ventilation, both techniques in combination are principally suitable to characterize ventilation-perfusion imbalance. This appears valuable for the assessment of regional lung characteristics in COPD trials without administration of i.v. contrast.
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Dostopno za:
DOBA, IZUM, KILJ, NUK, PILJ, PNG, SAZU, SIK, UILJ, UKNU, UL, UM, UPUK