Journal Information
Vol. 61. Issue 7.
Pages 398-407 (July 2025)
Share
Download PDF
More article options
Vol. 61. Issue 7.
Pages 398-407 (July 2025)
Original Article
Clinical Implications of Functional Imaging in the Assessment of Bronchiectasis-Associated Sarcopenia
Visits
1526
Mariela Alvarado-Mirandaa,b,c, Alberto Solanod, Salvatore Marsicod, Adriana Núñez-Robainasa,b, Maria Cinta Cumpli-Gargalloa, Marina Sáinza, José María Maiquesd, Esther Barreiroa,b,
Corresponding author
ebarreiro@researchmar.net

Corresponding author.
a Pulmonology Department-Muscle Wasting and Cachexia in Chronic Respiratory Diseases and Lung Cancer Research Group, IMIM-Hospital del Mar, Parc de Salut Mar, Department of Medicine and Life Sciences (MELIS), Universitat Pompeu Fabra (UPF), Barcelona Biomedical Research Park (PRBB), Barcelona, Spain
b Centro de Investigación en Red de Enfermedades Respiratorias (CIBERES), Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Madrid, Spain
c Pulmonology Department, Hospital Universitari Mutua Terrassa, Barcelona, Spain
d Radiology Department, Imatge Mèdica Intercentres-Parc de Salut Mar, Hospital del Mar, Barcelona, Spain
This item has received
Article information
Abstract
Full Text
Bibliography
Download PDF
Statistics
Figures (6)
Show moreShow less
Tables (3)
Table 1. Clinical Characteristics of the Study Patients.
Tables
Table 2. Nutritional and Systemic Inflammatory Parameters of the Study Patients.
Tables
Table 3. Fiber Type Characteristics of the Vastus Lateralis in the Study Subjects.
Tables
Show moreShow less
Additional material (1)
Abstract
Introduction

Bronchiectasis is a complex lung disease with poorly studied systemic manifestations. Patients with bronchiectasis-associated sarcopenia exhibit a specific differential profile of functional muscle phenotype (vastus lateralis, VL), which may be analyzed using imaging (ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging, MRI).

Methods

Ultrasound and MRI were used to explore functional imaging parameters in quadriceps of 20 patients with stable bronchiectasis and 10 healthy controls. In muscle specimens (open biopsy procedures), muscle phenotype (fiber morphometry and structural abnormalities, immunohistochemistry) was also evaluated. Patients and controls were clinically and functionally evaluated.

Results

In muscles of patients compared to controls, a significant decline in body composition parameters (BMI and FFMI), muscle function (upper and lower limbs), lung function, and exercise capacity was detected, ultrasonography revealed decreased muscle thickness and area, while MRI demonstrated increased fat infiltration, which positively correlated with the bronchiectasis severity scores. Structural parameters (proportions of hybrid fibers, internal nuclei, abnormal fibers, and apoptotic nuclei) were significantly greater in the VL of patients than in controls and inversely correlated with quadriceps muscle function and exercise capacity in the former.

Conclusions

In patients with stable mild-to-moderate bronchiectasis, sarcopenia was clinically evidenced through the significant reduction in muscle mass and upper and lower limb muscle function. Non-invasive ultrasound and MRI techniques showed that features of muscle quality architecture and fat infiltration are hallmarks of bronchiectasis-associated sarcopenia. Functional radiological tools should be implemented in clinical settings to early diagnose and monitor sarcopenia in these patients.

Keywords:
Bronchiectasis
Sarcopenia
Quadriceps muscle function
Ultrasound
Magnetic resonance imaging
Muscle abnormalities
Graphical abstract

Article

These are the options to access the full texts of the publication Archivos de Bronconeumología
Member
If you are a member of SEPAR:
  • Go to >>>SEPAR<<< website and sign in.
Subscriber
Subscriber

If you already have your login data, please click here .

If you have forgotten your password you can you can recover it by clicking here and selecting the option “I have forgotten my password”
Purchase
Purchase article

Purchasing article the PDF version will be downloaded

Purchase now
Contact
Phone for subscriptions and reporting of errors
From Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. (GMT + 1) except for the months of July and August which will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Calls from Spain
932 415 960
Calls from outside Spain
+34 932 415 960
Email
Archivos de Bronconeumología
Article options
Tools

Are you a health professional able to prescribe or dispense drugs?