72 consecutive patients with suspected parkinsonian syndromes (PS) were studied by dopamine transporter (DAT) and D2 receptor SPECT in order to evaluate the accuracy of combined SPECT imaging. In the follow-up, the patients were diagnosed as having Parkinson's disease (PD, n = 25), dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB, n = 6), multiple system atrophy (MSA, n = 13), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP, n = 8), corticobasal degeneration (CBD, n = 9), and essential tremor (ET, n = 11). Using the iteratively estimated optimal cutoffs, DAT was reduced in 57/61 PS patients, whereas all ET patients were identified as "normal". Reduced D2 receptor binding had 7/13 patients with MSA, 6/8 patients with PSP, 2/9 patients with CBD and no ET, PD or DLB patients. FP-CIT SPECT allows an accurate detection of nigrostriatal affection in neurodegenerative PS. IBZM SPECT is useful to approve the diagnosis of PSP and MSA although a normal finding cannot exclude an atypical PS. IBZM SPECT seems to be of restricted value in CBD.
The presence of vital carcinoma and mature teratoma is common (55%) in residual masses in patients with NSGCT, and CT and STM cannot reliably predict absence of disease. In contrast to prior studies, this prospective trial, which is the only with histologic confirmation in all patients, demonstrated that FDG-PET is unable to give a clear additional clinical benefit to the standard diagnostic procedures, CT and STM, in the prediction of tumor viability in residual masses.
The anatomic situation after arterial switch repair tended to produce temporary stenoses in the primary pulmonary arterial branches, with significant changes in hemodynamics. These changes may affect the long-term outcome and go undetected with other imaging modalities.
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