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Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) is a curvature of the spine that occurs in 1-2% of otherwise healthy children, and requires corrective surgery, posterior spinal fusion (PSF) in ~10% of cases. Some studies suggest that pulmonary function is reduced in AIS and that PSF improves pulmonary function. The lung is composed of a large number of branching airways that terminate in gas exchanging units called alveoli, and the number and structure of these alveoli are partially dependent upon lung volume and the forces to which they are exposed--two factors predicted to be altered in AIS. This study uses MRI imaging of inhaled helium to quantify alveolar structure in children with and without AIS before and one-year after PSF. The goals of the study are to determine if alveolar architecture or number are altered in AIS and whether PSF impacts these same measures.
Full description
After obtaining informed consent, subjects are trained in a breath holding technique that permits obtaining reproducible proton and hyperpolarized helium (HHE) lung images. 3-Helium is obtained from a vendor and hyperpolarized using an optical spin transfer device (FDA Investigational New Drug (IND) 122,670) and administered through a valved inhalation device while in the MRI scanner. Images are obtained during an ~15 second inspiratory breath hold. Proton MRI images are similarly obtained during a breath hold with room air using an ultrashort echo time sequence. From these MRI images, lung volumes, alveolar sizes, and estimated alveolar numbers are derived. Subjects are reimaged at 1 year to evaluate changes in these parameters during normal lung growth (controls) or after PSF (AIS subjects).
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Have had a previous spinal surgery.
Have other planned major surgeries during the study period.
a. Minor surgeries such as G-tube revisions or dental procedures are permissible.
Have or had a history of any chronic lung disease apart from restrictive lung disease from scoliosis (e.g.
cystic fibrosis, bronchopulmonary dysplasia, asthma, etc.).
Have a personal history of smoking
Require any supplemental oxygen at baseline. Home Biphasic Positive Airway Pressure (BiPAP) or Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) is acceptable provided the participant can perform the required breath holds without these devices.
Have been born at <35 weeks gestational age.
Received mechanical ventilation in the first year of life.
Have a room air oxygen saturation of less than 95%.
Have any implanted metal device or hardware (apart from future orthopaedic hardware).
Be likely to move out of the Cincinnati area before the one year follow-up appointment.
29 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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