Krypton replaces xenon for patient-friendly ventilation lung scan

Tuesday, November 29 | 10:40 a.m.-10:50 a.m. | SSG03-02 | Room S504AB
Ventilation lung scans with high-resolution CT can be used to examine lung morphology and function in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Replacing xenon with stable krypton gas might make the procedure easier for patients to complete, according to a new study.

The standard inhaled gas mixture (30% xenon plus oxygen) is well-tolerated by most patients; however, as many as 70% experience transient side effects "such as resistance in respiration or an uncomfortable feeling, sometimes leading to the interruption of the procedure," Dr. Martine Rémy-Jardin, from Hôpital Albert Calmette, told AuntMinnie.com.

In the study, to be presented by co-investigator Dr. Anne-Lise Hachulla, 32 patients with severe emphysematous lesions underwent dual-source, dual-energy chest CT with reconstruction of both diagnostic and ventilation images. Instead of the standard xenon mixture, however, patients inhaled a mixture of stable, nonradioactive krypton (80%) plus oxygen. Investigators measured attenuation in regions of severe emphysema, as well as in a region without structural abnormalities.

The attenuation differences between the two regions were all significant, demonstrating the feasibility of imaging with krypton and without patient side effects.

"Krypton ventilation CT with a dual-energy technique provides simultaneous thin-section CT and a ventilation map, both being able to be completed by quantitative analyses," Rémy-Jardin said. "Combined analysis of structural changes and regional ventilation from a single examination has the potential to help understand functional alterations in patients with COPD."

Patients had no side effects from krypton, and the radiation dose was in the range of a single-source CT exam, providing a combined morphological and functional evaluation of the lungs.

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