Air trapping in early cystic fibrosis lung disease-Does CT tell the full story?
Access Status
Authors
Date
2017Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
ISSN
School
Collection
Abstract
Introduction: Mosaic attenuation on expiratory chest computed tomography (CT) is common in early life cystic fibrosis (CF) and often referred to as “air trapping”. It is presumed to be localized hyperinflation due to small airway obstruction. In order to test this assumption, we compared air trapping extent to lung volumes measured on CT in young children with CF. Materials and Methods: Children aged below 7 years undergoing inspiratory/expiratory CT were recruited from the Australian Respiratory Early Surveillance Team for Cystic Fibrosis cohort. Automated lung segmentation was used to determine functional residual capacity (FRC), total lung capacity (TLC), and their ratio (FRC/TLC). Structural lung disease (%Disease) and air trapping (%TrappedAir) extent were assessed using PRAGMA-CF. Lung clearance index (LCI), an index of ventilation heterogeneity, was measured. Linear mixed model analysis was used to determine associations. Results: Seventy-three scans from 55 patients were obtained. %TrappedAir was associated with %Disease (0.19 [0.07, 0.31]; P = 0.003) and LCI (0.22 [0.04, 0.39]; P = 0.016), but not FRC/TLC (0.00 [−0.02, 0.02]; P = 0.931). Discussion: CT mosaic attenuation is associated with CF lung disease, however it is not always accompanied by physiologic hyperinflation. Other pathologies may contribute to mosaic attenuation. A better understanding of these factors could guide future therapies.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Turner, Sian Elizabeth (2009)Background and research questions. The characterization of chronic persistent asthma in an older adult population is not well defined. This is due to the difficulties in separating the diagnosis of asthma from that of ...
-
Ramsey, K.; Rosenow, T.; Turkovic, L.; Skoric, B.; Banton, G.; Adams, A.; Simpson, S.; Murray, C.; Ranganathan, S.; Stick, S.; Hall, Graham (2016)Rationale: The lung clearance index is a measure of ventilation distribution derived from the multiple-breath washout technique. It has been suggested as a surrogate for chest computed tomography to detect structural lung ...
-
Hall, Graham; Logie, K.; Parsons, F.; Schulzke, S.; Nolan, G.; Murray, C.; Ranganathan, S.; Robinson, P.; Sly, P.; Stick, S. (2011)Background: In school-aged children with cystic fibrosis (CF) structural lung damage assessed using chest CT is associated with abnormal ventilation distribution. The primary objective of this analysis was to determine ...