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Dive into the research topics where Hooman Hamedani is active.

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Featured researches published by Hooman Hamedani.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2012

A multislice single breath-hold scheme for imaging alveolar oxygen tension in humans

Hooman Hamedani; Stephen Kadlecek; Kiarash Emami; Nicholas N. Kuzma; Yinan Xu; Yi Xin; Puttisarn Mongkolwisetwara; Jennia Rajaei; Amy Barulic; G. Wilson Miller; Milton D. Rossman; Masaru Ishii; Rahim R. Rizi

Reliable, noninvasive, and high‐resolution imaging of alveolar partial pressure of oxygen (pAO2) is a potentially valuable tool in the early diagnosis of pulmonary diseases. Several techniques have been proposed for regional measurement of pAO2 based on the increased depolarization rate of hyperpolarized 3He. In this study, we explore one such technique by applying a multislice pAO2‐imaging scheme that uses interleaved‐slice ordering to utilize interslice time‐delays more efficiently. This approach addresses the low spatial resolution and long breath‐hold requirements of earlier techniques, allowing pAO2 measurements to be made over the entire human lung in 10–15 s with a typical resolution of 8.3 × 8.3 × 15.6 mm3. PO2 measurements in a glass syringe phantom were in agreement with independent gas analysis within 4.7 ± 4.1% (R = 0.9993). The technique is demonstrated in four human subjects (healthy nonsmoker, healthy former smoker, healthy smoker, and patient with COPD), each imaged six times on 3 different days during a 2‐week span. Two independent measurements were performed in each session, consisting of 12 coronal slices. The overall pAO2 mean across all subjects was 95.9 ± 12.2 Torr and correlated well with end‐tidal O2 (R = 0.805, P < 0.0001). The alveolar O2 uptake rate was consistent with the expected range of 1–2 Torr/s. Repeatable visual features were observed in pAO2 maps over different days, as were characteristic differences among the subjects and gravity‐dependent effects. Magn Reson Med, 2012.


Radiology | 2016

Regional Fractional Ventilation by Using Multibreath Wash-in (3)He MR Imaging

Hooman Hamedani; Justin T. Clapp; Stephen Kadlecek; Kiarash Emami; Masaru Ishii; Warren B. Gefter; Yi Xin; Maurizio Cereda; Hoora Shaghaghi; Sarmad Siddiqui; Milton D. Rossman; Rahim R. Rizi

Purpose To assess the feasibility and optimize the accuracy of the multibreath wash-in hyperpolarized helium 3 ((3)He) approach to ventilation measurement by using magnetic resonance (MR) imaging as well as to examine the physiologic differences that this approach reveals among nonsmokers, asymptomatic smokers, and patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Materials and Methods All experiments were approved by the local institutional review board and compliant with HIPAA. Informed consent was obtained from all subjects. To measure fractional ventilation, the authors administered a series of identical normoxic hyperpolarized gas breaths to the subject; after each inspiration, an image was acquired during a short breath hold. Signal intensity buildup was fit to a recursive model that regionally solves for fractional ventilation. This measurement was successfully performed in nine subjects: three healthy nonsmokers (one man, two women; mean age, 45 years ± 4), three asymptomatic smokers (three men; mean age, 51 years ± 5), and three patients with COPD (three men; mean age, 59 years ± 5). Repeated measures analysis of variance was performed, followed by post hoc tests with Bonferroni correction, to assess the differences among the three cohorts. Results Whole-lung fractional ventilation as measured with hyperpolarized (3)He in all subjects (mean, 0.24 ± 0.06) showed a strong correlation with global fractional ventilation as measured with a gas delivery device (R(2) = 0.96, P < .001). Significant differences between the means of whole-lung fractional ventilation (F2,10 = 7.144, P = .012) and fractional ventilation heterogeneity (F2,10 = 7.639, P = .010) were detected among cohorts. In patients with COPD, the protocol revealed regions wherein fractional ventilation varied substantially over multiple breaths. Conclusion Multibreath wash-in hyperpolarized (3)He MR imaging of fractional ventilation is feasible in human subjects and demonstrates very good global (whole-lung) precision. Fractional ventilation measurement with this physiologically realistic approach reveals significant differences between patients with COPD and healthy subjects. To minimize error, several sources of potential bias must be corrected when calculating fractional ventilation. (©) RSNA, 2016 Online supplemental material is available for this article.


Radiology | 2015

Alterations of Regional Alveolar Oxygen Tension in Asymptomatic Current Smokers: Assessment with Hyperpolarized 3He MR Imaging

Hooman Hamedani; Stephen Kadlecek; Masaru Ishii; Yi Xin; Kiarash Emami; Biao Han; Hoora Shaghaghi; Diana Gopstein; Maurizio Cereda; Warren B. Gefter; Milton D. Rossman; Rahim R. Rizi

PURPOSE To assess the ability of helium 3 ((3)He) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of regional alveolar partial pressure of oxygen (Pao2) to depict smoking-induced functional alterations and to compare its efficacy to that of current diagnostic techniques. MATERIALS AND METHODS This study was approved by the local institutional review board and was compliant with HIPAA. All subjects provided informed consent. A total of 43 subjects were separated into three groups: nonsmokers, asymptomatic smokers, and symptomatic smokers. All subjects underwent a Pao2 imaging session followed by clinically standard pulmonary function tests (PFTs), the 6-minute walk test, and St George Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ). The whole-lung mean and standard deviation of Pao2 were compared with metrics derived from PFTs, the 6-minute walk test, and the SGRQ. A logistic regression model was developed to identify the predictors of alterations to the lungs of asymptomatic smokers. RESULTS The whole-lung standard deviation of Pao2 correlated with PFT metrics (forced expiratory volume in 1 second [FEV1]/forced vital capacity [FVC], Pearson r = -0.69, P < .001; percentage predicted FEV1, Pearson r = -0.67, P < .001; diffusing capacity of lung for carbon monoxide [Dlco], Pearson r = -0.45, P = .003), SGRQ score (Pearson r = 0.67, P < .001), and distance walked in 6 minutes (Pearson r = -0.47, P = .002). The standard deviation of Pao2 was significantly higher in asymptomatic smokers than in nonsmokers (change in the standard deviation of Pao2 = 7.59 mm Hg, P = .041) and lower when compared with symptomatic smokers (change in the standard deviation of Pao2 = 10.72 mm Hg, P = .001). A multivariate prediction model containing FEV1/FVC and the standard deviation of Pao2 (as significant predictors of subclinical changes in smokers) and Dlco (as a confounding variable) was formulated. This model resulted in an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve with a significant increase of 29.2% when compared with a prediction model based solely on nonimaging clinical tests. CONCLUSION The (3)He MR imaging heterogeneity metric (standard deviation of Pao2) enabled the differentiation of all three study cohorts, which indicates that it can depict smoking-related functional alterations in asymptomatic current smokers.


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2013

A variability study of regional alveolar oxygen tension measurement in humans using hyperpolarized 3He MRI

Hooman Hamedani; Stephen Kadlecek; Masaru Ishii; Kiarash Emami; Nicholas N. Kuzma; Yi Xin; Milton D. Rossman; Rahim R. Rizi

A systematic study of the short‐term and long‐term variability of regional alveolar partial pressure of oxygen tension (pAO2) measurements using 3He magnetic resonance imaging was presented. Additionally, the repeatability of the average evaluated pAO2 was compared with that of the standard pulmonary function tests.


NMR in Biomedicine | 2014

Metabolic spectroscopy of inflammation in a bleomycin-induced lung injury model using hyperpolarized 1-13C pyruvate

Hoora Shaghaghi; Stephen Kadlecek; Charuhas Deshpande; Sarmad Siddiqui; Daniel Martinez; Hooman Hamedani; Masaru Ishii; Harrilla Profka; Rahim R. Rizi

Metabolic activity in the lung is known to change in response to external insults, inflammation, and cancer. We report measurements of metabolism in the isolated, perfused rat lung of healthy controls and in diseased lungs undergoing acute inflammation using hyperpolarized 1‐13C‐labeled pyruvate. The overall apparent activity of lactate dehydrogenase is shown to increase significantly (on average by a factor of 3.3) at the 7 day acute stage and to revert substantially to baseline at 21 days, while other markers indicating monocarboxylate uptake and transamination rate are unchanged. Elevated lung lactate signal levels correlate well with phosphodiester levels as determined with 31P spectroscopy and with the presence of neutrophils as determined by histology, consistent with a relationship between intracellular lactate pool labeling and the density and type of inflammatory cells present. We discuss several alternate hypotheses, and conclude that the most probable source of the observed signal increase is direct uptake and metabolism of pyruvate by inflammatory cells and primarily neutrophils. This signal is seen in high contrast to the low baseline activity of the lung. Copyright


Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2013

Accelerated fractional ventilation imaging with hyperpolarized Gas MRI.

Kiarash Emami; Yinan Xu; Hooman Hamedani; Harrilla Profka; Stephen Kadlecek; Yi Xin; Masaru Ishii; Rahim R. Rizi

To investigate the utility of accelerated imaging to enhance multibreath fractional ventilation (r) measurement accuracy using hyperpolarized gas MRI. Undersampling shortens the breath‐hold time, thereby reducing the O2‐induced signal decay and allows subjects to maintain a more physiologically relevant breathing pattern. Additionally, it may improve r estimation accuracy by reducing radiofrequency destruction of hyperpolarized gas.


NMR in Biomedicine | 2012

Multislice fractional ventilation imaging in large animals with hyperpolarized gas MRI.

Kiarash Emami; Yinan Xu; Hooman Hamedani; Yi Xin; Harrilla Profka; Jennia Rajaei; Stephen Kadlecek; Masaru Ishii; Rahim R. Rizi

The noninvasive assessment of regional lung ventilation is of critical importance in the quantification of the severity of disease and evaluation of response to therapy in many pulmonary diseases. This work presents, for the first time, the implementation of a hyperpolarized (HP) gas MRI technique to measure whole‐lung regional fractional ventilation (r) in Yorkshire pigs (n = 5) through the use of a gas mixing and delivery device in the supine position. The proposed technique utilizes a series of back‐to‐back HP gas breaths with images acquired during short end‐inspiratory breath‐holds. In order to decouple the radiofrequency pulse decay effect from the ventilatory signal build‐up in the airways, the regional distribution of the flip angle (α) was estimated in the imaged slices by acquiring a series of back‐to‐back images with no interscan time delay during a breath‐hold at the tail end of the ventilation sequence. Analysis was performed to assess the sensitivity of the multislice ventilation model to noise, oxygen and the number of flip angle images. The optimal α value was determined on the basis of the minimization of the error in r estimation: αopt = 5–6º for the set of acquisition parameters in pigs. The mean r values for the group of pigs were 0.27 ± 0.09, 0.35 ± 0.06 and 0.40 ± 0.04 for the ventral, middle and dorsal slices, respectively (excluding conductive airways r > 0.9). A positive gravitational (ventral–dorsal) ventilation gradient effect was present in all animals. The trachea and major conductive airways showed a uniform near‐unity r value, with progressively smaller values corresponding to smaller diameter airways, and ultimately leading to lung parenchyma. The results demonstrate the feasibility of the measurement of the fractional ventilation in large species, and provide a platform to address the technical challenges associated with long breathing time scales through the optimization of acquisition parameters in species with a pulmonary physiology very similar to that of humans. Copyright


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2017

The use of hyperpolarized carbon-13 magnetic resonance for molecular imaging.

Sarmad Siddiqui; Stephen Kadlecek; Yi Xin; William Mannherz; Hooman Hamedani; Nicholas Drachman; Kai Ruppert; Justin Clapp; Rahim R. Rizi

&NA; Until recently, molecular imaging using magnetic resonance (MR) has been limited by the modalitys low sensitivity, especially with non‐proton nuclei. The advent of hyperpolarized (HP) MR overcomes this limitation by substantially enhancing the signal of certain biologically important probes through a process known as external nuclear polarization, enabling real‐time assessment of tissue function and metabolism. The metabolic information obtained by HP MR imaging holds significant promise in the clinic, where it could play a critical role in disease diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring. This review will provide a comprehensive overview of the developments made in the field of hyperpolarized MR, including advancements in polarization techniques and delivery, probe development, pulse sequence optimization, characterization of healthy and diseased tissues, and the steps made towards clinical translation.


Anesthesiology | 2016

Visualizing the Propagation of Acute Lung Injury

Maurizio Cereda; Yi Xin; Natalie Meeder; Johnathan Zeng; Yunqing Jiang; Hooman Hamedani; Harrilla Profka; Stephen Kadlecek; Justin T. Clapp; Charuhas Deshpande; Jue Wu; James C. Gee; Brian P. Kavanagh; Rahim R. Rizi

Background:Mechanical ventilation worsens acute respiratory distress syndrome, but this secondary “ventilator-associated” injury is variable and difficult to predict. The authors aimed to visualize the propagation of such ventilator-induced injury, in the presence (and absence) of a primary underlying lung injury, and to determine the predictors of propagation. Methods:Anesthetized rats (n = 20) received acid aspiration (hydrochloric acid) followed by ventilation with moderate tidal volume (VT). In animals surviving ventilation for at least 2 h, propagation of injury was quantified by using serial computed tomography. Baseline lung status was assessed by oxygenation, lung weight, and lung strain (VT/expiratory lung volume). Separate groups of rats without hydrochloric acid aspiration were ventilated with large (n = 10) or moderate (n = 6) VT. Results:In 15 rats surviving longer than 2 h, computed tomography opacities spread outward from the initial site of injury. Propagation was associated with higher baseline strain (propagation vs. no propagation [mean ± SD]: 1.52 ± 0.13 vs. 1.16 ± 0.20, P < 0.01) but similar oxygenation and lung weight. Propagation did not occur where baseline strain was less than 1.29. In healthy animals, large VT caused injury that was propagated inward from the lung periphery; in the absence of preexisting injury, propagation did not occur where strain was less than 2.0. Conclusions:Compared with healthy lungs, underlying injury causes propagation to occur at a lower strain threshold and it originates at the site of injury; this suggests that tissue around the primary lesion is more sensitive. Understanding how injury is propagated may ultimately facilitate a more individualized monitoring or management.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2015

Semiautomatic segmentation of longitudinal computed tomography images in a rat model of lung injury by surfactant depletion.

Yi Xin; Gang Song; Maurizio Cereda; Stephen Kadlecek; Hooman Hamedani; Yunqing Jiang; Jennia Rajaei; Justin T. Clapp; Harrilla Profka; Natalie Meeder; Jue Wu; Nicholas J. Tustison; James C. Gee; Rahim R. Rizi

Quantitative analysis of computed tomography (CT) is essential to the study of acute lung injury. However, quantitative CT is made difficult by poor lung aeration, which complicates the critical step of image segmentation. To overcome this obstacle, this study sought to develop and validate a semiautomated, multilandmark, registration-based scheme for lung segmentation that is effective in conditions of poor aeration. Expiratory and inspiratory CT images were obtained in rats (n = 8) with surfactant depletion of incremental severity to mimic worsening aeration. Trained operators manually delineated the images to provide a comparative landmark. Semiautomatic segmentation originated from a single, previously segmented reference image obtained at healthy baseline. Deformable registration of the target images (after surfactant depletion) was performed using the symmetric diffeomorphic transformation model with B-spline regularization. Registration used multiple landmarks (i.e., rib cage, spine, and lung parenchyma) to minimize the effect of poor aeration. Then target images were automatically segmented by applying the calculated transformation function to the reference image contour. Semiautomatically and manually segmented contours proved to be highly similar in all aeration conditions, including those characterized by more severe surfactant depletion and expiration. The Dice similarity coefficient was over 0.9 in most conditions, confirming high agreement, irrespective of poor aeration. Furthermore, CT density-based measurements of gas volume, tissue mass, and lung aeration distribution were minimally affected by the method of segmentation. Moving forward, multilandmark registration has the potential to streamline quantitative CT analysis by enabling semiautomatic image segmentation of lungs with a broad range of injury severity.

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Stephen Kadlecek

University of Pennsylvania

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Rahim R. Rizi

University of Pennsylvania

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Yi Xin

University of Pennsylvania

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Kiarash Emami

University of Pennsylvania

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Masaru Ishii

Johns Hopkins University

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Maurizio Cereda

University of Pennsylvania

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Yinan Xu

University of Pennsylvania

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Harrilla Profka

University of Pennsylvania

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Milton D. Rossman

University of Pennsylvania

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