Imperial College London

Emeritus ProfessorDerekBell

Faculty of MedicineSchool of Public Health

Emeritus Professor in Acute Medicine
 
 
 
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Contact

 

+44 (0)7886 725 212d.bell

 
 
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Assistant

 

Miss Heather Barnes +44 (0)20 3315 8144

 
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Location

 

Chelsea and Westminster HospitalChelsea and Westminster Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Citation

BibTex format

@article{Muir:1985,
author = {Muir, AL and Adie, CJ and Kirby, TP and Bell, D and Brash, HM and Hannan, WJ},
journal = {Nucl Med Commun},
pages = {127--139},
title = {Regional tidal volume assessed by gated lung imaging},
volume = {6},
year = {1985}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - We have measured regional lung tidal volumes and functional residual capacities by accumulating and framing iso-volumic images while the patient rebreathes 127Xe. As the lung changes shape during ventilation corrections for changes in geometry were obtained by simultaneous collection of 99Tcm counts from the gated perfusion scan. Regions of interest were made to vary throughout the respiratory cycle so that a region had always the same value of 99Tcm counts. From the corrected 127Xe counts regional tidal volumes (TVr) and functional residual capacities (FRCr) were derived. In patients with established chronic bronchitis and emphysema FRCr were greater and the ratio TVr/FRCr decreased compared with patients with relatively normal static and dynamic lung volumes. Preliminary studies suggest that this ratio was a better discriminator between normal and abnormal regional function than estimates of regional xenon washout. Studies with xenon-133 have contributed to our understanding of the physiology of ventilation but have contributed somewhat less to routine clinical practice. This results in part from the unsatisfactory physical properties of xenon-133. Its relatively low gamma ray energy of 80 keV results in significant self-absorption losses and the activity which may be administered is limited by the radiation dose from the associated beta particles so that relatively poor counting statistics are obtained. With inhaled technetium-99m (99Tcm) microspheres imaging conditions are greatly improved but the distribution of these particles may not equate with the distribution of ventilation particularly if wet particles are used. Moreover, simultaneous microsphere perfusion scans with technetium-99m as a label are impossible. Krypton-81m gas has a suitable energy but the short half-life of the rubidium-81m generator (4.7 h) makes supply difficult and the ultrashort half-life of the krypton-81m gas (13 s) leads to problems in calculating the indices of ventilation. Xenon-12
AU - Muir,AL
AU - Adie,CJ
AU - Kirby,TP
AU - Bell,D
AU - Brash,HM
AU - Hannan,WJ
EP - 139
PY - 1985///
SN - 0143-3636
SP - 127
TI - Regional tidal volume assessed by gated lung imaging
T2 - Nucl Med Commun
VL - 6
ER -