We confirmed that reduced NIS mRNA expression in thyroid malignant nodules is associated with strong intracellular protein staining and may be related to the inability of the NIS protein to migrate to the cellular basolateral membrane. These results may explain the low iodide uptake of malignant nodules.
The tools currently used to evaluate the extent of paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM) may be of limited value in detecting subclinical lesions. The aim of this study was to verify the role of gallium-67 whole-body scan in evaluating the extent of disease of 65 patients with active PCM. The (67)Ga scan findings were compared with the results of clinical evaluation, chest radiography and/or high-resolution computed tomography (CT), abdominal ultrasound (US) or CT, laryngoscopy, CT or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head, and technetium-99m methylene diphosphonate bone scan, obtained before treatment. Clinically unsuspected lesions were detected by imaging procedures in 21 patients (32%), mainly in the lungs (n=11), adrenals (n=6), and superficial (n=3) and deep lymph nodes (n=14). (67)Ga scan detected 100% of the cases with subclinical involvement in the lungs. Scintigraphy was superior to chest radiography in demonstrating lung disease (94% vs 81%). The lymphatic lesions were demonstrated by (67)Ga scan in all the clinically suspected cases and in nearly all unsuspected cases, and also revealed more extensive involvement than was clinically suspected in many of them. There was good agreement between (67)Ga scan and the other imaging procedures for the initial detection of thoracic and abdominal lymph nodes and bone involvement. (67)Ga imaging detected most cases of laryngopharyngeal disease with active inflammatory lesions found at indirect laryngoscopy. On the other hand, (67)Ga scan failed to demonstrate most of the adrenal and CNS lesions detected by abdominal US/CT and head CT/MRI. In conclusion, (67)Ga imaging is a useful tool for evaluating the location and extent of suspected and unsuspected lesions in PCM. It could serve as a screening method before the use of other diagnostic procedures, particularly in the detection of lung, superficial and deep lymph node and bone involvement.
This study indicates that the treatment of thyroid cancer by applying radioiodine activities up to 7.4 GBq, on an outpatient basis, is a safe procedure, especially when supervised by qualified professionals. This alternative therapy should be a topic for careful discussion considering the high potential for reducing costs in healthcare and improving patient acceptance.
The objective of this study were to obtain dosimetric data from a patient with thyroid cancer simultaneously undergoing peritoneal dialysis therapy, so as to determine the appropriate amount of 131I activity to be applied therapeutically. Percentages of radioiodine in the blood and the whole-body were evaluated, and radiation absorbed doses were calculated according to OLINDA/EXM software. Whole-body 131I effective half-time was 45.5 hours, being four times longer than for patients without any renal dysfunction. Bone-marrow absorbed dose was 0.074 mGy/MBq, with ablative procedure maintenance at 3.7 GBq, as the reported absorbed dose was insufficiently restrictive to change the usual amount of radioiodine activity administered for ablation. It was concluded that radioiodine therapeutic-dose adjustment, based on individual patient dosimetry, is an important way of controlling therapy. It also permits the safe and potential delivery of higher doses of radiation to tumors and undesirable tissues, with a minimum of malignant effects on healthy tissues.
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