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Title: Assessment of cross-sectional lung ventilation-perfusion imbalance in primary and passive pulmonary hypertension with automated V/Q SPECT. Author: Suga K, Tokuda O, Okada M, Koike M, Iwanaga H, Matsunaga N. Journal: Nucl Med Commun; 2010 Jul; 31(7):673-81. PubMed ID: 20418789. Abstract: PURPOSE: Cross-sectional lung ventilation (V)-perfusion (Q) imbalance in primary pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and passive pulmonary hypertension (PH) was characterized by automated V/Q single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Technegas/macro-aggregated albumin SPECT-derived V/Q SPECT and V/Q profile were automatically built to characterize cross-sectional lung V-Q imbalance in 12 patients with primary (idiopathic or familial) PAH and 15 patients with passive PH associated with left ventricular dysfunction or failure. The abnormality of V/Q distribution in these patients was correlated with PaO2 and pulmonary arterial pressure and with lung morphologic changes on computed tomography (CT). RESULTS: Markedly low V/Q ratios (reverse V-Q mismatch) in the background lungs with heterogeneous V/Q distribution was seen in 12 of the 12 (100%) patients with primary PAH and in 10 of the 15 (66%) patients with passive PH, which were predominantly seen in the upper lung zone. Including these regions with reverse V-Q mismatch, the V/Q profile frequently showed flattened peaks with asymmetric and broadened V/Q distribution in all patients, with significant correlation between the standard deviation of V/Q ratios in the entire lungs and PaO2 and mean pulmonary arterial pressure (both; P<0.01). At the regions of the lungs with reverse V-Q mismatch, bronchial lumens compressed by dilated pulmonary arteries and heterogeneous lung attenuations were frequently seen on CT. CONCLUSION: Patients with primary PAH and passive PH seem to characteristically have a high prevalence of reverse V-Q mismatch indicative of an inadequate hypoxic vasoconstriction reflex on V/Q SPECT, frequently accompanied with heterogeneous lung attenuations and compressed airways on CT.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]