Purpose
The aim of this study was to demonstrate the feasibility of fluorine‐19 (19F) MRI of the human lungs using octafluorocyclobutane (OFCB, C4F8). This gas has 8 magnetically equivalent fluorine nuclei and relatively long T1 and T2 (˜50 ms), which render it suitable as an MRI contrast agent. Previous experiments in small laboratory animals showed that OFCB could be successfully used as an alternative to the gases often used for 19F MRI (sulfur hexafluoride and perfluoropropane).
Methods
One male volunteer participated in this study. Immediately before an MRI scan, the volunteer inhaled the gas mixture—80% OFCB with 20% oxygen—and held his breath. Experiments were performed on a 0.5T whole‐body MR scanner with a customized transmit–receive coil tuned at 19F frequency. Fast spin echo in 2D and 3D modes was used for image acquisition. 2D images were obtained with in‐plane resolution of 10 × 10 mm2 without slice selection. 3D images were obtained with the voxel size of 10 × 10 × 30 mm2. Breath‐hold duration was 20 s for 2D and 40 s for 3D imaging, respectively.
Results
Anatomically consistent 19F MR images of the human lungs were obtained with SNR around 50 in 2D mode and 20 in 3D mode. 3D volumetric images of the lungs were reconstructed and provided physiologically reasonable volume estimates.
Conclusion
The application of OFCB enables informative 19F lung imaging even at low magnetic field strengths. The OFCB gas shows promise as an inhalable contrast agent for fluorine lung MRI and has a potential for clinical translation.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.