Frontiers in Medicine (May 2023)

Functional imaging for assessing regional lung ventilation in preclinical and clinical research

  • Dipan Karmali,
  • Mudiaga Sowho,
  • Sonali Bose,
  • Jackson Pearce,
  • Vickram Tejwani,
  • Zuzana Diamant,
  • Zuzana Diamant,
  • Zuzana Diamant,
  • Keerthi Yarlagadda,
  • Erick Ponce,
  • Nina Eikelis,
  • Tamas Otvos,
  • Akram Khan,
  • Michael Lester,
  • Andreas Fouras,
  • Jason Kirkness,
  • Trishul Siddharthan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1160292
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Dynamic heterogeneity in lung ventilation is an important measure of pulmonary function and may be characteristic of early pulmonary disease. While standard indices like spirometry, body plethysmography, and blood gases have been utilized to assess lung function, they do not provide adequate information on regional ventilatory distribution nor function assessments of ventilation during the respiratory cycle. Emerging technologies such as xenon CT, volumetric CT, functional MRI and X-ray velocimetry can assess regional ventilation using non-invasive radiographic methods that may complement current methods of assessing lung function. As a supplement to current modalities of pulmonary function assessment, functional lung imaging has the potential to identify respiratory disease phenotypes with distinct natural histories. Moreover, these novel technologies may offer an optimal strategy to evaluate the effectiveness of novel therapies and therapies targeting localized small airways disease in preclinical and clinical research. In this review, we aim to discuss the features of functional lung imaging, as well as its potential application and limitations to adoption in research.

Keywords