Asthma is a disease characterized by chronic inflammation and reversible obstruction of the small airways resulting in impaired pulmonary ventilation. Hyperpolarized 3 He magnetic resonance (MR) lung imaging is a new technology that provides a detailed image of lung ventilation. Hyperpolarized 3 He lung imaging was performed in 10 asthmatics and 10 healthy subjects. Seven asthmatics had ventilation defects distributed throughout the lungs compared with none of the normal subjects. These ventilation defects were more numerous and larger in the two symptomatic asthmatics who had abnormal spirometry. Ventilation defects studied over time demonstrated no change in appearance over 30 -60 minutes. One asthmatic subject was studied twice in a three-week period and had ventilation defects which resolved and appeared in that time. This same subject was studied before and after bronchodilator therapy, and all ventilation defects resolved after therapy. Hyperpolarized 3 He lung imaging can detect the small, reversible ventilation defects that characterize asthma. The ability to visualize lung ventilation offers a direct method of assessing asthmatics and their response to therapy. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2001;13: 378 -384.
Hip dysplasia is a not uncommon feature in adults and can vary from subtle acetabular dysplasia to complex sequelae of developmental dysplasia of the hip. This review article describes the most useful radiographic measurements used to evaluate the adult hip. The frontal projection of the pelvis permits measurement of the center-edge angle (CE angle) and "horizontal toit externe" angle (HTE angle), both of which assess the superior coverage of the acetabulum. The femoral neck-shaft angle (NSA) is also measured on this view. The false profile radiograph of the pelvis is described. It allows measurement of the vertical-center-anterior angle (VCA angle), which determines the anterior acetabular coverage and detects early degenerative hip joint disease. When surgery is contemplated, computed tomography (CT) is useful to better determine the anterior acetabular coverage by use of the anterior acetabular sector angle (AASA), and the posterior acetabular coverage by use of the posterior acetabular sector angle (PASA). CT also permits measurement of femoral anteversion. These measurements are particularly useful in the evaluation of acetabular dysplasia and for the preoperative assessment of the dysplastic hip.
The persistent high mortality in infants with pulmonary artery "sling" (retrotracheal anomalous left pulmonary artery) is primarily due to the coexistence in such patients of long-segment tracheal stenosis due to complete cartilage rings. Five such patients are reported. Airway studies (by filtered high-kV radiography, bronchography, and/or CT) showed low carina, horizontal equal-length right and left mainstem bronchi, and long-segment tracheal stenosis. The length of the stenosis far exceeded the contact with the pulmonary sling. The suggested term "ring-sling complex" for such patients correctly places emphasis on detection of the tracheal malformation, which currently has no satisfactory surgical treatment.
The authors present the radiographic features of a previously incompletely delineated bone dysplasia, which they call spondylometaphyseal dysplasia, corner fracture type. This is a dominant heritable condition associated with short stature and developmental coxa vara. The progressive hip deformity usually causes significant disability requiring surgical correction. Developmental coxa vara, simulated corner fractures of long tubular bones, and vertebral body abnormalities result in a diagnostic constellation. Knowledge of these distinctive radiologic features allows accurate diagnosis, which in turn should lead to appropriate genetic counseling and possibly to earlier, more efficacious surgical treatment of the coxa vara.
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