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Regional lung perfusion as determined by electrical impedance tomography in comparison with electron beam CT imaging
ISSN
0278-0062
Date Issued
2002
Author(s)
DOI
10.1109/TMI.2002.800585
Abstract
The aim of the experiments was to check the feasibility of pulmonary perfusion imaging by functional electrical impedance tomography (FIT) and to compare the FIT findings with electron beam computed tomography (EBCT) scans. In three pigs, a Swan-Ganz catheter was positioned in a pulmonary artery branch and hypertonic saline solution or a radiographic contrast agent were administered as boli through the distal or proximal openings of the catheter. During the administration through the proximal opening, the balloon at the tip of the catheter was either deflated or inflated. The latter case represented a perfusion defect. The series of FIT scans of the momentary distribution of electrical impedance within the chest were obtained during each saline bolus administration at a rate of 13/s. EBCT scans were acquired at a rate of 3.3/s during bolus administrations of the radiopaque contrast material under the same steady-state conditions. The FIT data were used to generate local time-impedance curves and functional FIT images showing the perfusion of a small lung region, both lungs with a perfusion defect and complete both lungs during bolus administration through the distal and proximal catheter opening with an inflated or deflated balloon, respectively. The results indicate that FIT imaging of lung perfusion is feasible when an electrical impedance contrast agent is used.