Claims
- 1. An in vivo method for evaluating a physiological structure or environment, or physiologic function of a system in a subject using polarized 129Xe, comprising:
delivering polarized 129Xe gas in vivo to a subject; obtaining a first NMR spectroscopic signal of the polarized gas in the subject at at least one chemical shift frequency to generate a first dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal values over time, with the polarization of the 129Xe being repetitively destroyed at predetermined delays in a compartment or compartments of interest, the dynamic data set being representative of the polarized gas in a physiologic structure, environment, and/or system of interest; exposing the subject to stress; obtaining a second NMR spectroscopic signal of the polarized gas in the subject at the at least one chemical shift frequency to generate a second dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal values over time, with the polarization of the 129Xe being repetitively destroyed at predetermined delays in the compartment or compartments of interest; and comparing the first and second dynamic data sets to evaluate the response of the structure, environment, and/or system to stress.
- 2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the physiologic structure undergoing evaluation comprises the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 3. A method according to claim 2, further comprising calculating the time constant associated with the time it takes the polarized gas to diffuse across the alveolar-capillary membrane and into pulmonary blood.
- 4. A method according to claim 3, further comprising generating NMR 129Xe uptake curves using the dynamic data and analyzing data associated with the 129Xe uptake curves to determine the thickness of the alveolar-capillary membrane based on data provided by said calculating step.
- 5. A method according to claim 1, wherein the cardiopulmonary system function is evaluated based on the comparing steps.
- 6. A method according to claim 1, wherein the function of the alveolar-capillary membrane is evaluated based on the comparing steps.
- 7. A method according to claim 2, wherein the comparing step comprises comparing the time constants associated with each data set to assess the function of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 8. A method according to claim 2, wherein the step of determining is used to quantify the thickness of the alveolar-capillary membrane having a thickness in the range of about 1 micron to about 100 microns.
- 9. A method according to claim 1, further comprising administering a therapeutic agent to the subject and monitoring its impact on the cardiopulmonary system based on the comparing step.
- 10. A method according to claim 1, wherein the step of administering 129Xe is carried out by the subject, inhaling a quantity of the polarized 129Xe such that the polarized 129Xe travels to the lung air space to enter pulmonary vasculature tissue, and diffuse across the alveolar-capillary membrane into pulmonary blood, and wherein the first and second obtaining steps are carried out to include two frequencies, one associated with the tissue and one associated with the blood, and wherein the step of comparing considers both the first and second tissue and blood signal data sets.
- 11. A method according to claim 1, wherein the physiological structure evaluated is one of the glomerular capillary membrane, bowel membrane, placental membrane, and blood brain barrier.
- 12. A method according to claim 1, wherein the obtaining step is carried out to monitor the efficacy of a therapeutic administered to the subject.
- 13. A method according to claim 12, further comprising assessing the function of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 14. A method according to claim 1, further comprising generating an MR image of the anatomy of interest using a dual tuned 129Xe and 1H RF excitation coil.
- 15. A method according to claim 1, further comprising obtaining a polarized noble gas 129Xe MRI ventilation distribution measurement image.
- 16. A method according to claim 1, further comprising diagnosing the presence or absence of chronic heart failure based on said obtaining steps.
- 17. A method according to claim 3, further comprising measuring pulmonary fibrosis using the time constant determined in said calculating step.
- 18. A method according to claim 1, further comprising evaluating at least one of glomerular filtration rate, acute and chronic renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, glomerulonephritis and other renal diseases based at least in part on said obtaining steps.
- 19. A method according to claim 1, further comprising evaluating large and small bowel wall function based on said obtaining steps.
- 20. A method according to claim 1, further comprising evaluating placental membrane function based on said obtaining steps.
- 21. A method according to claim 1, further comprising evaluating the blood brain barrier based on said obtaining steps.
- 22. A method according to claim 1, further comprising evaluating the patient for respiratory disorders, injuries or ailments based at least in part on said obtaining steps.
- 23. A method according to claim 10, further comprising destroying the polarization of the polarized gas in the pulmonary blood and alveolar-capillary membrane using a predetermined large flip angle RF pulse before said obtaining steps.
- 24. A method according to claim 23, further comprising exciting the polarized gas in the pulmonary blood and alveolar-capillary membrane with a plurality of temporally spaced 90 degree RF pulses transmitted at varying predetermined delays in each of said obtaining steps.
- 25. A method according to claim 9, wherein said delivering step is carried out via breath-hold inhalation.
- 26. An in vivo method for evaluating a physiologic structure, environment, or function in a subject using polarized 129Xe, comprising:
delivering polarized 129Xe gas in vivo to a subject; obtaining a first NMR spectroscopic signal of the polarized gas in the subject at at least one chemical shift frequency to generate a first dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal values over time, with the polarization of the 129Xe being repetitively destroyed at predetermined delays in a compartment or compartments of interest, the dynamic data set being representative of the polarized gas in a physiologic structure, environment, or system of interest; administering a physiological active therapeutic agent to the subject; obtaining a second NMR spectroscopic signal of the polarized gas in the subject at the at least one chemical shift frequency to generate a second dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal values over time, with the polarization of the 129Xe being repetitively destroyed at predetermined delays in a compartment or compartments of interest; and comparing the first and second dynamic data sets to evaluate the physiological response of the subject to the therapeutic agent.
- 27. A method according to claim 26, wherein the physiologic structure undergoing evaluation is the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 28. A method according to claim 26, further comprising calculating the time constant associated with the time it takes the polarized 129Xe to diffuse across the alveolar-capillary membrane based on the data provided by the obtaining steps.
- 29. A method according to claim 28, further comprising generating a plurality of 129Xe uptake curves of signal strength versus time based on said first and second dynamic data sets and determining the thickness of the alveolar-capillary membrane based on data provided by said calculating and generating steps.
- 30. A method according to claim 26, wherein the evaluating step considers the response in the function of the cardiopulmonary system based on the comparing steps.
- 31. A method according to claim 26, wherein the evaluating step considers the response in the function or structure of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 32. A method according to claim 31, wherein the evaluating step comprises calculating and comparing the time constants associated with each data set to assess the function of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 33. A method according to claim 32, further comprising determining the thickness of the alveolar-capillary membrane before and after administration of the therapeutic agent based on the obtaining steps.
- 34. A method according to claim 26, wherein the step of administering 129Xe is carried out by the subject inhaling a quantity of the polarized 129Xe the 129Xe diffusing across the alveolar-capillary membrane into pulmonary blood, and wherein the first and second obtaining steps are carried out to include two frequencies, one associated with the 129Xe in tissue and one associated with 129Xe in the blood, and wherein the step of comparing considers both the first and second tissue and blood signal data sets.
- 35. A method according to claim 26, wherein the physiological structure evaluated is one of the glomerular capillary membrane, bowel membrane, placental membrane, and blood brain barrier.
- 36. A method according to claim 26, wherein the physiological structure is a membrane in the body of the subject.
- 37. A method according to claim 26, wherein the physiological structure is the bowel wall.
- 38. A method according to claim 26, wherein the physiological structure is the blood brain barrier.
- 39. A method according to claim 26, further comprising evaluating organ perfusion based on said obtaining steps.
- 40. An in vivo method for evaluating whether a subject has a respiratory disorder, or a cardiopulmonary disorder such as chronic heart failure, comprising:
delivering polarized 129Xe in vivo to a subject such that the polarized 129Xe travels across the alveolar-capillary membrane to be taken up in the blood across the membrane, the polarized gas in the blood having a polarized 129Xe NMR chemical shift signal frequency; destroying the polarization of the polarized 129Xe in the blood and the membrane; obtaining an NMR spectroscopic signal of the polarized gas in the subject over time at the blood and/or tissue resonant frequency to generate at least one dynamic data set to generate at least one NMR 129Xe uptake curve at at least one chemical shift frequency of interest of signal strength values over time; and evaluating the NMR derived dynamic data set to assess whether the subject has a respiratory or cardiopulmonary disorder.
- 41. A method according to claim 40, wherein the subject is evaluated for chronic heart failure.
- 42. A method according to claim 40, further comprising:
calculating a time constant associated with the time it takes the polarized gas to travel across the membrane and then enter the blood after said destroying step; and determining a diffusion thickness based on data provided by said obtaining and calculating steps.
- 43. A method according to claim 42, wherein the step of obtaining comprises obtaining a plurality of signal data points over a time which is greater than about twice the time constant.
- 44. A method according to claim 42, wherein said obtaining step is carried out when the subject is at rest and then repeated while the subject is exposed to conditions of actual or chemically induced exercise, and wherein said method further comprises comparing the time constants associate therewith to thereby assess the function of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 45. A method according to claim 43, further comprising calculating asymptotes and intercepts of the NMR 129Xe signal uptake curves from the NMR data and determining the membrane thickness, wherein the membranes have a thickness in the range of between about 1 micron to about 100 microns.
- 46. A method according to claim 40, wherein the obtaining step is carried out a plurality of times, including at least once while the subject is at rest and at least once when the subject is under or just after actual or simulated physical activity when the heart rate is elevated.
- 47. A method according to claim 40, wherein the obtaining step is performed after a therapeutic agent is administered to the subject to evaluate the efficacy in treating the disorder or to evaluate its impact on the thickness of the alveolar-capillary membrane.
- 48. A method according to claim 47, wherein the obtaining step is carried out both before and after the administration of the therapeutic to the subject.
- 49. A method according to claim 40, wherein the evaluating step comprises evaluating at least one of thickness of the alveolar-capillary membrane, perfusion in the pulmonary blood, and ejection fraction, based on said obtaining step.
- 50. A method according to claim 40, further comprising providing a predetermined diffusion model of alveolar gas exchange employing an alveolar gas compartment, a tissue compartment, and a capillary compartment; and
calculating a plurality of selected bioparameters related to lung function and/or physiology using NMR-derived data associated with 129Xe uptake curves and the predetermined diffusion model.
- 51. A method according to claim 50, further comprising computing a total diffusion length “L” associated with the combined tissue compartment thickness and the capillary compartment thickness by the equation:
- 52. A method according to claim-50, wherein the calculating step is carried out by combining the tissue and capillary compartments into a single compartment using a common 129Xe concentration value.
- 53. A method according to claim 50, further comprising:
defining equations representing the NMR signals associated with each of tissue, plasma and red blood cells using a respective Ostwald solubility coefficient for each compartment; and computing at least one of a time constant, intercept and slope of an asymptote derived from the signal build up curve of polarized 129Xe associated with the tissue and capillary compartments derived from the NMR dynamic data set to determine a plurality of selected parameters related to perfusion and/or diffusion.
- 54. A method according to claim 53, wherein the computing step computes the intercept and slope asymptote values for both the tissue uptake curve and the blood compartment uptake curve based on the NMR data.
- 55. A method according to claim 53, further comprising evaluating the dynamic NMR data set to determine the NMR uptake curve signal of the 129Xe associated with the tissue, plasma and red blood cells.
- 56. A method according to claim 50, further comprising concurrently assessing diffusing capacity and pulmonary perfusion using the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 57. A method according to claim 50, wherein the concurrently determined parameters include at least two of: tissue thickness, capillary thickness, perfusion, mean transit time and alveolar radius.
- 58. A method according to claim 57, wherein the parameters comprise at least two of hematocrit, perfusion, and mean transit time.
- 59. A method according to claim 57, wherein the parameters comprise pulmonary perfusion.
- 60. A method according to claim 50, further comprising determining a hematocrit value based on the 129Xe-NMR data set.
- 61. A method according to claim 50, wherein the parameters include at least two of the alveolar radius, the alveolar volume, and the relative blood volume based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 62. A method according to claim 40, further comprising evaluating the subject for indications of a drug-induced lung disorder and/or injury.
- 63. A method according to claim 50, further comprising evaluating the subject for an environmentally induced lung injury based on the NMR-derived dynamic data set.
- 64. A method according to claim 50, further comprising evaluating the subject for at least one of pulmonary inflammation, pulmonary edema, pulmonary hypertension, and pneumonitis/pulmonary fibrosis based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 65. A method according to claim 40, further comprising monitoring the subject for indications of a transplant rejection based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 66. An in vivo method for evaluating a subject for chronic heart failure comprising:
(a) delivering polarized 129Xe in vivo to a subject such that the polarized 129Xe moves across the alveolar-capillary membrane to be taken up in the blood across the membrane, the polarized gas in the blood having a corresponding polarized gas NMR chemical shift signal frequency; (b) destroying the polarization of the polarized 129Xe in the blood and the membrane; (c) obtaining an NMR spectroscopic signal of the polarized 129Xe in the subject over time at the blood chemical shift frequency to generate at least one dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal strength over time; (d) evaluating the dynamic data; and (e) determining whether the subject has chronic heart failure based on the obtaining and evaluating steps.
- 67. A computer program product for evaluating lung physiology and/or the function of a subject, the computer program product comprising:
a computer readable storage medium having computer readable program code embodied in said medium, said computer-readable program code comprising:
computer readable program code that obtains a first NMR spectroscopic signal of polarized 129Xe in the subject over time at a selected chemical shift frequency to generate at least one dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal strength values over time; computer readable program code that obtains a second NMR spectroscopic signal of polarized 129Xe in the subject over time at a selected chemical shift frequency to generate at least one dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal strength values over time; and computer readable program code that compares the first and second dynamic data sets to evaluate one or more of: (a) the presence of chronic heart failure; (b) to evaluate a physiologic response to a therapeutic agent; (c) to monitor the progression of a respiratory and/or cardiopulomary disease; and (d) a physiological response to applied stimulus (chemical or physical).
- 68. An in vivo method for evaluating respiratory, pulmonary and/or cardiopulmonary physiology and/or function, comprising:
(a) delivering polarized 129Xe in vivo to a subject such that the polarized 129Xe moves serially from an alveolar gas compartment through a tissue compartment with thickness LT, a capillary compartment with thickness LC comprising plasma and red blood cells, and is then taken away in the blood stream; (b) obtaining NMR spectroscopic signals of the polarized 129Xe in the subject over time at selected chemical shift frequencies to generate at least one dynamic data set of the NMR spectroscopic signal strength over time after successively destroying the polarization of the 129Xe repetitively at predetermined delays in the compartments; and (c) calculating a plurality of selected parameters associated with lung function and/or physiology according to a predetermined mathematical diffusion model of alveolar gas exchange using the NMR-derived dynamic data set.
- 69. A method according to claim 68, further comprising evaluating the calculated parameters to determine a pulmonary condition of a patient to thereby assess respiratory, pulmonary, and/or cardiopulmonary function or associated physiology.
- 70. A method according to claim 68, further comprising assessing both membrane diffusion and pulmonary perfusion based on the NMR data set.
- 71. A method according to claim 69, further comprising identifying whether the subject exhibits gas-exchange that is perfusion or diffusion limited.
- 72. A method according to claim 71, wherein the NMR signals include at least one signal associated with dissolved 129Xe, the dissolved-phase NMR signal having an associated signal build up curve with an initial exponential build-up portion and a dynamic equilibrium portion, wherein the build-up curve has an uptake time constant associated with the initial build-up portion of the NMR signal, the method further comprising taking the ratio of the uptake time constant and mean transit time to determine whether the gas exchange is perfusion or diffusion limited.
- 73. A method according to claim 68, wherein the NMR signals include signals at a frequency associated with dissolved-phase 129Xe, the dissolved-phase signals having signal uptake curves with an initial exponential build-up portion and a dynamic equilibrium portion, the dynamic equilibrium portion of the uptake curves having an associated asymptote slope and intercept, wherein the slopes and intercepts of the asymptotes of the dissolved-phase 129Xe NMR uptake curves are used to calculate mean transit time, perfusion and relative blood volume.
- 74. A method according to claim 68, wherein at least one of the NMR signals is a dissolved-phase 129Xe NMR signal that has a signal uptake curve with an initial exponential build-up portion and a dynamic equilibrium portion in a time period of interest, the signal having an associated asymptote slope and intercept after the initial exponential build-up portion, wherein the uptake curve has an uptake diffusing time constant associated with the initial build-up portion of the NMR signal, and wherein total diffusing thickness “L” is calculated directly from the uptake time constant τ1, using the equation:
- 75. A method according to claim 74, further comprising mathematically transforming selected variables in a predetermined equation associated with the thickness of at least one compartment in the predetermined diffusion model and using data associated with a time constant determined from the signal build up curve of polarized 129Xe in the tissue and/or capillary compartment derived from the NMR dynamic data set to measure a pathological and/or physiological structure and/or condition.
- 76. A method according to claim 75, wherein the pathological condition is thickening or thinning of a patient's alveolar membrane.
- 77. A method according to claim 68, further comprising concurrently assessing alveolar diffusion and pulmonary perfusion using the NMR data set.
- 78. A method according to claim 68, further comprising providing data that identifies the presence or absence of an environmentally induced lung disorder.
- 79. A method according to claim 68, further comprising data that identifies the presence or absence of a drug-induced lung injury.
- 80. A method according to claim 68, further comprising monitoring a patient's response to a therapeutic drug.
- 81. A method according to claim 80, wherein the monitoring is carried out to assess whether the patient is exhibiting an undesirable response to a therapeutic agent.
- 82. A method according to claim 68, wherein the predetermined mathematical diffusion model of alveolar gas exchange includes an alveolar gas compartment, a tissue compartment, and a capillary compartment.
- 83. A method according to claim 82, wherein the predetermined diffusion model defines three boundaries, an alveoli-tissue boundary, a tissue-capillary boundary, and an outer capillary boundary.
- 84. A method according to claim 68, wherein the NMR data set includes data for NMR signals associated with the polarized 129Xe in the alveolar compartment, the tissue compartment, and the capillary or blood compartment at corresponding polarized gas NMR chemical shift signal frequencies.
- 85. A method according to claim 84, further comprising destroying the polarization of the polarized 129Xe in the tissue and capillary compartments prior to acquisition of the NMR data set.
- 86. A method according to claim 82, wherein the calculating step is carried out by combining the tissue and capillary compartments of the model into a single compartment with a common 129Xe concentration value.
- 87. A method according to claim 68, wherein the predetermined mathematical diffusion model comprises a capillary compartment and a tissue compartment, the method further comprising evaluating the NMR signal from the capillary compartment and the tissue compartment to determine a hematocrit value.
- 88. A method according to claim 68, further comprising evaluating the dynamic NMR data set to determine signal build-up curves of the NMR signals of the 129Xe associated with each of tissue, plasma and red blood cells.
- 89. A method according to claim 50, wherein the calculating step comprises determining at least two parameters of the lung or pulmonary system using the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 90. A method according to claim 89, wherein at least one of the parameters is selected from the group of: hematocrit, lung perfusion, and mean transit time.
- 91. A method according to claim 89, wherein one of the parameters is pulmonary perfusion.
- 92. A method according to claim 68, wherein the calculating step is carried out to determine a plurality of different parameters including at least two of alveolar radius, alveolar volume, and relative blood volume based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 93. A method according to claim 68, further comprising evaluating the subject for indications of a drug-induced lung disorder and/or injury based on the calculating step.
- 94. A method according to claim 68, further comprising evaluating the subject for an environmentally induced lung injury based on the calculating step.
- 95. A method according to claim 68, further comprising evaluating the subject for at least one of pulmonary inflammation, pulmonary edema, pulmonary hypertension, and pneumonitis/pulmonary fibrosis based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 96. A method according to claim 68, further comprising monitoring the subject for indications of a transplant rejection based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 97. A method according to claim 69, wherein the evaluating step is carried out to provide data that identifies the presence or absence of a diffuse lung disorder.
- 98. A method according to claim 68, further comprising evaluating the subject using the dynamic data set and/or the calculated selected parameters to identify whether the subject has at least one of the conditions selected from the group: pulmonary inflammation, pneumonitis/fibrosis, transplant rejection response, interstitial lung disease, pulmonary edema, pulmonary hypertension and interstitial and/or alveolar inflammation.
- 99. A method according to claim 98, wherein the evaluating step is carried out during clinical evaluation of a drug in drug discovery or clinical trials.
- 100. A method according to claim 98, wherein the evaluating step is carried out to allow for intervention of a negative or adverse response to a therapeutic drug.
- 101. A computer program product for in vivo evaluation of a patient, the computer program product comprising:
a computer readable storage medium having computer readable program code embodied in said medium, said computer-readable program code comprising:
computer readable program code that obtains first and second NMR spectroscopic signals of polarized 129Xe in the subject over time at selected chemical shift frequencies to generate corresponding dynamic data sets of NMR spectroscopic signal strength values over time; computer readable program code that provides a predetermined multiple compartment mathematical diffusion model of aveolar gas exchange; and computer readable program code that uses data from the dynamic data sets and the mathematical model to calculate a plurality of selected parameters to determine whether there is a detectable deficit in perfusion, diffusion, and/or ventilation, and, if a deficit is detected to identify if the deficit is associated with alveolar membrane diffusing capacity and/or pulmonary perfusion.
- 102. A computer program product according to claim 101, wherein the NMR signals include at least one signal associated with dissolved polarized 129Xe, the dissolved-phase NMR signal having a signal build up curve with an initial exponential build-up portion and a dynamic equilibrium portion, wherein the signal build-up curve has an uptake time constant associated with the initial build-up portion of the NMR signal curve, said computer program product further comprising computer program that calculates the ratio of the uptake time constant and mean transit time to determine whether the gas exchange is perfusion or diffusion limited.
- 103. A computer program product according to claim 101, wherein at least one of the obtained NMR signals is a dissolved phase polarized 129Xe NMR signal that has a signal build up curve with an initial exponential build-up portion and a dynamic equilibrium portion in a time period of interest, the dissolved phase signal having an associated asymptote slope and intercept after the initial exponential build-up portion, wherein said computer program product comprises computer program code for calculating an uptake time constant associated with the initial build-up portion of the NMR signal, and wherein said computer program product includes computer program code for calculating a total diffusing thickness directly from the calculated uptake time constant.
- 104. A computer program product according to claim 101, further comprising computer program code that mathematically transforms selected variables in the predetermined mathematical diffusion model to assess pulmonary function, physiology and/or condition based on measured NMR signal data.
- 105. A computer program product according to claim 103, further comprising computer program code that calculates the total diffusion thickness “L” using equation:
- 106. A computer program product according to claim 101, further comprising computer program code that generates data identifying when the patient may have an environmentally induced lung disorder based on the NMR derived data.
- 107. A computer program product according to claim 101, further comprising computer program code that calculates sufficient selected parameters from the NMR derived data sets to output data identifying whether a drug-induced lung injury is detected.
- 108. A computer program product according to claim 101, further comprising computer program code that can monitor a patient's response to an administered therapeutic drug based on the NMR derived data sets.
- 109. A computer program product according to claim 101, wherein the computer program code of the predetermined mathematical diffusion model of alveolar gas exchange includes three compartments, an alveolar gas compartment, a tissue compartment, and a capillary compartment.
- 110. A computer program product according to claim 109, wherein the computer program code of the diffusion model defines three boundaries, an alveoli-tissue boundary, a tissue-capillary boundary, and an outer capillary boundary.
- 111. A computer program product according to claim 109, wherein the NMR data set includes data for NMR signals associated with the polarized 129Xe in the tissue compartment and capillary compartment at corresponding polarized gas NMR chemical shift signal frequencies.
- 112. A computer program product according to claim 111, further comprising computer program code that transmits an RF pulse configured to destroy the polarization of the polarized 129Xe in the blood and the tissue compartments prior to acquisition of the NMR data set.
- 113. A computer program product according to claim 109, wherein the computer program code is configured to combine the tissue and capillary compartments of the model into a single compartment with a common 129Xe concentration value.
- 114. A computer program product according to claim 101, wherein the computer program code that provides the mathematical model is configured to define a capillary compartment and a tissue compartment, and wherein the computer program product further comprises computer program code that evaluates the NMR signals from the capillary compartment and tissue compartment to determine a hematocrit value.
- 115. A computer program product according to claim 101, wherein the computer program code that uses data from the first and second dynamic data sets and the mathematical model to calculate a plurality of selected parameters comprises computer program code that determines at least two of hematocrit, lung perfusion, and mean transit time.
- 116. A computer program product according to claim 115, wherein the computer program code that uses data from the first and second dynamic data sets and the mathematical model to calculate a plurality of selected parameters comprises computer program code that determines a plurality of different parameters including at least two of alveolar radius, alveolar volume, and relative blood volume based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 117. A computer program product according to claim 116, further comprising computer program code that evaluates the NMR-derived data sets to determine whether the subject has a drug-induced lung disorder and/or injury.
- 118. A computer program product according to claim 116, further comprising computer program code that evaluates the NMR-derived data sets to determine whether the subject has an environmentally induced lung injury.
- 119. A computer program product according to claim 101, further comprising computer program code that evaluates the NMR data sets to determine the presence of at least one of pulmonary inflammation, pulmonary edema, pulmonary hypertension, and pneumonitis/pulmonary fibrosis based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 120. A computer program product according to claim 101, further comprising computer program code that compares the NMR data to monitor the subject for indications of a transplant rejection based on the 129Xe NMR data set.
- 121. A computer program product according to claim 117, further comprising computer program code that obtains a plurality of NMR data sets of the subject over time during clinical evaluation of a drug in drug discovery or clinical trials and monitors the NMR data of the subject.
- 122. A system for evaluating lung physiology or functionality, the system comprising:
means for evaluating first and second NMR spectroscopic signals of polarized 129Xe in a subject over time at selected chemical shift frequencies to generate corresponding dynamic data sets of NMR spectroscopic signal strength values of signal build-up curves over time using a multi-compartment predetermined mathematical diffusion model of aveolar gas exchange; and means for calculating the values of a plurality of selected parameters associated with lung physiology and function in a manner that determines whether there is a detectable deficit using data from the first and second dynamic data sets and the mathematical model, wherein the selected parameters comprise total diffusion length, tissue thickness, blood thickness, perfusion, mean transit time, relative blood volume, and alveolar radius.
- 123. A system according to claim 122, further comprising a computation module that can determine whether the deficit is associated with alveolar membrane diffusing capacity and/or pulmonary perfusion.
- 124. A system according to claim 122, wherein the means for calculating and evaluating includes obtaining an uptake curve of 129Xe in tissue and blood compartments, and determining the time constant and the slope and intercept of the asymptote of the linear portion of the curve for each of the uptake curves.
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of and claims priority to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/236,233, filed Sep. 6, 2002, which claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/323,667, filed Sep. 20, 2001. The contents of these documents are hereby incorporated by reference as if recited in full herein.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
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60323667 |
Sep 2001 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
10236233 |
Sep 2002 |
US |
Child |
10356240 |
Jan 2003 |
US |