City
Epaper

Scientists develop scan that unravels secrets of lung function

By IANS | Updated: December 25, 2024 11:05 IST

New Delhi, Dec 25 A team of scientists has developed a new method of scanning lungs that is ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Dec 25 A team of scientists has developed a new method of scanning lungs that is able to show the effects of treatment on lung function in real time, enabling them to see the functioning of transplanted lungs.

The scan method enabled the team, led by researchers at Newcastle University in the UK, to see how air moves in and out of the lungs as people take a breath in patients with asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and patients who have received a lung transplant.

“We hope this new type of scan might allow us to see changes in the transplant lungs earlier and before signs of damage are present in the usual blowing tests. This would allow any treatment to be started earlier and help protect the transplanted lungs from further damage,” said Professor Andrew Fisher, Professor of Respiratory Transplant Medicine at Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Newcastle University, UK.

In the study published in Radiology and JHLT Open, the team explained how they use a special gas, called perfluoropropane, that can be seen on an MRI scanner.

The gas can be safely breathed in and out by patients, and then scans taken to look at where in the lungs the gas has reached.

“Our scans show where there is patchy ventilation in patients with lung disease, and show us which parts of the lung improve with treatment,” said project lead, Professor Pete Thelwall at Newcastle University.

The new scanning technique allows the team to quantify the degree of improvement in ventilation when patients have a treatment, in this case a widely used inhaler, the bronchodilator, salbutamol. This shows that the imaging methods could be valuable in clinical trials of new treatments of lung disease.

There is potential for this scan method to be used in the clinical management of lung transplant recipients and other lung diseases in the future, said researchers.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsIPL 2026: Pathan believes KKR will target Green in auction as a ‘like-for-like replacement’ of Russell

Other SportsIndia maintain 'no handshake' policy against Pakistan in U19 Asia Cup

BusinessIndian economy serves 18 pc of world’s population as it aims $5 trillion goal: Prof Ajay Sood

Other SportsTelangana CM thanks Messi for enthralling fans in Hyderabad, congratulates security personnel

NationalTelangana CM thanks Messi for enthralling fans in Hyderabad, congratulates security personnel

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyWPI inflation, India-US trade talks, Rupee movement likely to drive market next week

TechnologyCII proposes 6-pronged investment roadmap for India’s next decade of growth

TechnologyIndia emerges as world’s 3rd most competitive AI power

TechnologyNumber of high net worth individuals in S. Korea grows over 3 pc to nearly 480,000

TechnologyFIIs sell equity worth Rs 15,959 crore in Dec so far, DIIs buy for Rs 39,965 crore