CT enables demonstration of pulmonary thromboembolism with criteria pertaining to pulmonary arteries and to lung parenchyma and enables assessment of technical operatibility and confirmation of surgical success.
A sufficiently accurate quantification of renal function requiring only one plasma sample without an additional gamma-camera study has, until now, only been possible in adults. A new principle will be presented here allowing the universal application of known algorithms, regardless of the clearance substance used, by normalizing the plasma concentrations with respect to the individual body dimensions of the patients--for infants as well as for adults. In this respect, algorithms are developed for clearance determinations using technetium-99m mercaptoacetyltriglycine (99mTc-MAG3), which are based on steady-state studies as the reference. They allow the calculation of quantitative clearance values in infants, requiring only one blood sampling at any time between the 25th and the 40th min postinjection. The comparison with a combined camera/two-plasma-sample technique performed in 46 children aged between 9 days and 14 years (mean 6.05 years) resulted in a standard error of 8.5% from the line of identity (r = 0.94). Moreover, this procedure also increases the accuracy of results in adults.
The results of 119 radioimmunoscintigraphies (RIS) in 113 patients with the 99mTc-labeled monoclonal anti-CEA-antibody BW 431/26 (Behring) have been analysed. The aim of our study was the estimation of the method's sensitivity and specificity under different aspects to find out for which indications and questions the 99mTc-RIS is useful. Colorectal primary tumours in 19 patients were scintigraphically detected with a sensitivity of 83% and a specificity of 100%; 3 out of 7 other tumour sites were localised correctly. 55 patients were examined during the follow-up of colorectal cancer. There were 17 out of 22 true positive findings of local recurrences (sensitivity 77%, specificity 88%). Liver metastases were imaged as hot lesions with only 41% sensitivity and 86% specificity. The detection of extrahepatic tumour sites is difficult because of the persistently high blood-pool activity of the monoclonal antibody and, in the pelvic area, the unspecific bowel activity. Skeletal metastases were recognised in 7 out of 9 cases. In 14 patients with other non-colorectal carcinomas, RIS was successful in single cases. It is not helpful, however, when searching for tumours of unknown origin or for the screening of patients with elevated CEA levels without tumour history. The high technical, methodological and time effort required by RIS is justified in the follow-up of cancer patients when conventional diagnostic procedures are inconclusive or the status of morphological findings remains unclear. The use of RIS as an unspecific screening tool in tumour diagnosis must be rejected because of the not completely explored risks of the examination. Repeated applications of monoclonal antibodies require controls of the patients' HAMA titers before performing RIS.
Concerning malignant tumours of the oral cavity, pharynx and larynx, bone metastases are in general rarely seen. For the specification to which patients the whole body bone scintigraphy as detection method should be applied, the findings of 370 patients were analysed retrospectively. In respect of primary staging, bone metastases could be found by scintigraphy in only 1.4% of the patients. On the other hand, there was a detection rate of 12% during the further course of the disease, especially in case of clinical symptoms pointing at spreading metastases or in tumour recurrences. Nevertheless, positive scan findings which were not due to metastases could be found in both groups with equal frequency (12 and 13%, respectively). Therefore the routine performance of whole body bone scintigraphy as a screening method does not seem to be useful in the primary staging of cancer of the mouth, pharynx and larynx. Contrary to this, in the follow-up of these tumours bone scanning proves to be a valuable and sensitive method for detecting skeletal metastases.
In patients with chronic pulmonary thromboembolism, increased lung density on CT is caused by hyperperfused lung parenchyma distally to patent pulmonary arteries. SPECT proves to be more sensitive in diagnosing perfusion inhomogeneities.
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