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NONINVASIVE IMAGING OF LUNG PATHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY IN MURINE MODELS OF ASTHMA AND COPD

Title: NONINVASIVE IMAGING OF LUNG PATHOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY IN MURINE MODELS OF ASTHMA AND COPD
Authors: Jobse, Brian N.
Contributors: Labiris, Renée N.; Medical Sciences (Molecular Virology and Immunology Program)
Publication Year: 2013
Collection: McMaster University: MacSphere
Subject Terms: CT; SPECT; V/Q; Asthma; COPD; Noninvasive Imaging; Allergy and Immunology; Circulatory and Respiratory Physiology; Disease Modeling; Immune System Diseases; Medical Biophysics; Pathology; Physiological Processes; Radiology; Respiratory Tract Diseases
Description: Obstructive lung diseases limit airflow and gas exchange and have a major impact on a patient’s long-term health. Asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are the most prevalent obstructive lung diseases and represent a major burden on healthcare systems worldwide. It is now accepted that the pathologies associated with these diseases are heterogeneous in nature, and as the function of the lung is determined by its three-dimensional structure, methods to volumetrically evaluate the lung are important tools in furthering the study of these pathologies. Three-dimensional imaging methodologies, such as computed tomography (CT) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), are used clinically in the diagnosis of lung disease, but results are not commonly quantified. In addition, asthma and COPD develop slowly over time and diagnosis normally takes place after the underlying pathologies are well established. Experimental models in small animals, such as rats and mice, allow for the study of disease pathogenesis in a controlled setting and development of quantitative imaging practices for these models provides translational tools for relating results back to the clinic. In this thesis, CT densitometry and ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) SPECT are explored as methods to investigate models of asthma and COPD. CT densitometry is shown to be capable of quantifying allergic inflammation in an asthma model but is of less use in a model of COPD, predominantly due to the relative amounts of inflammation present. However, V/Q imaging is shown to be quite sensitive to the effects of cigarette smoke in a model of COPD and has been used to better understand how pathologies associated with COPD contribute to gas exchange limitation in the lung. The models, imaging techniques, and analysis methods described in this work provide insight into chronic obstructive lung disease and allow for future investigations into how pathologies effect gas exchange. Further, the characterization of the models described in this ...
Document Type: thesis
File Description: application/pdf
Language: unknown
Relation: opendissertations/7689; 8744; 3612379; https://hdl.handle.net/11375/12835
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/11375/12835
Accession Number: edsbas.6133589F
Database: BASE