A prospective study was carried out on 13 patients with ulcerative colitis and 11 with Crohn's disease to compare the value of radioimmunoscintigraphy involving 99mTc-labeled antigranulocyte monoclonal antibody (BW 250/183) with that of hexamethylpropyleneamine-oxime-labeled leukocyte scintigraphy. The extent of the process (various segments of the small bowel; ascending, transverse, and descending colon; and rectosigmoideum) was determined in 115 segments by means of radioimmunoscintigraphy and leukocyte scintigraphy and compared with the results of enteroclysis and colonoscopy in 64 segments. The scintigraphic activity, calculated by summing the segment scores, was compared with clinical and laboratory parameters. During radioimmunoscintigraphy, the 24-hr fecal excretion of the antibody was measured. The two methods revealed a different extent of the process (P<0.01). The segmental sensitivity and specificity were 63% and 96% in radioimmunoscintigraphy, and 87% and 94% in leukocyte scintigraphy. Leukocyte scintigraphy proved to be superior in cases with small intestine involvement, but the methods are of similar value in cases with large bowel involvement. The scintigraphic activity determined by radioimmunoscintigraphy and the fecal excretion of monoclonal antibody correlated with seven parameters, while that determined by leukocyte scintigraphy did so with 12 variables. Both methods are of similar value for the detection of large bowel involvement, but leukocyte scintigraphy was the better method for determination of the involved segments in the small intestine. The scintigraphic activity proved a useful parameter, correlating well with the clinical and laboratory variables.
Posttraumatic osteomyelitis was investigated in 23 patients using nuclear medicine techniques. Tc-99m hexamethylpropilene amine oxime (HMPAO)-labeled leukocyte scintigraphy was performed in 11 patients, and Tc-99m nanocolloid scanning was performed in the other 12 patients. The scintigraphic findings were compared with clinical, laboratory, radiologic, and bacteriologic results. The findings on leukocyte imaging were consistent with the clinical symptoms in 7 of 11 patients, with the laboratory pattern in 7 of 10 patients, with the radiologic findings in 7 of 11 patients, and with the results of bacteriology in 6 of 7 patients. The findings on nanocolloid scintigraphy corresponded with the clinical symptoms in 9 of 12 patients, with the laboratory pattern in 8 of 10 patients, with the radiologic findings in 8 of 12 patients, and with the bacteriology in 4 of 5 patients. The results suggest that both methods were of similar value for the detection of chronic posttraumatic osteomyelitis regardless of whether the process was active. Conversely, on the basis of semiquantitative analysis of the images, leukocyte scintigraphy seemed to characterize the grade of inflammation better than did nanocolloid scintigraphy.
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