Search results for "Left pulmonary artery"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Kontrastmittelverstärkte 3D-MR-Perfusion der Lunge: Einsatz paralleler Bildgebungstechniken bei gesunden Probanden
2004
PURPOSE Evaluation of lung perfusion by contrast-enhanced 3D MRI using partial parallel imaging techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS Eight healthy volunteers were examined using a contrast-enhanced dynamic FLASH 3D sequence with partial parallel imaging technique at 1.5 T MRI with a TA of 1.5 sec. The whole lung was covered by 36 coronal slices. A ventral, middle and dorsal slice of each lung was manually segmented and signal-to-time curves were computed. For absolute quantification of blood flow through the right and left pulmonary artery, phase-contrast flow measurements were performed. RESULTS No significant difference was found between the signal intensity in the right (8.9 +/- 2.6) and le…
Transcatheter recanalisation and stenting of a closed ductus arteriosus in duct dependent lung perfusion
1998
In patients with the congenital cardiac malformation of tetralogy of Fallot, occasionally one pulmonary artery, usually the left, seems angiographically to be absent.1 This pulmonary artery is usually present, but discontinuous with the pulmonary trunk, having originally been supplied by a patent arterial duct. With closure of the duct, the receiving flow to that pulmonary artery is by small collateral vessels, which leads to reduced growth of the involved pulmonary vessels and impedes definite surgical repair. We report a case of a 2 day old, 1890 g, premature, cyanotic boy (oxygen saturation 82%) with tetralogy of Fallot, right sided aortic arch, and discontinuity between the pulmonary tr…
Thoracic research scholarship 1988: pulmonary thromboendarterectomy for chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension at the University of California…
1990
At the University of California, San Diego pulmonary thromboendarterectomy (PTE) has emerged as an effective measure in the treatment of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. Unresolved emboli become organized by incorporation into the vascular wall and may form strictures, webs, bands and/or membranous occlusions and cause pulmonary hypertension refractory to medical treatment. When pulmonary vascular resistance exceeds 300 dyn.sec.cm-5 and the vascular wall changes are located to begin at or proximal to the lobar artery level, surgery is indicated. The operation is performed using cardiopulmonary bypass, deep hypothermia and periods of circulatory arrest. The dissection of each s…