1970
DOI: 10.1002/art.1780130103
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99m Technetium scintiphotography in arthritis. II. its nonspecificity and clinical and roentgenographic correlations in rheumatoid arthritis

Abstract: Technetium-99m scintiphotography of the hands, wrists and knee joints of 24 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) showed abnormal localization of isotope in one or more synovial structures in 96% of hands, in 94% of wrists and in 74% of knees. The results of scintiphotography correlated well with clinical assessment of synovial thickening and tenderness in the proximal interphalangeal and metacarpophalangeal joints of 9 consecutive RA patients. Scintiphotography proved more sensitive than clinical examinatio… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…They found a good correlation with their clinical assessment of the activity of the joint disease. Whaley, Pack, Boyle, Dick, Downie, Buchanan, and Gillespie (1968), Green andHays (1969), andMcCarty, Polcyn, andCollins (1970a) applied scanning and scintiphotographic techniques over normal and diseased joints after intravenous injections of radio-technetium (M99 TcO4). All these methods measure primarily the vascularity of the synovial tissue, although the radioactivity may be increased slightly by accumulation of the tagged material in joint effusions (Weiss and others, 1965;McCarty, Polcyn, Collins, and Gottschalk, 1970b) and by synovial tissue binding in the case of radiotechnetium (Green and Hays, 1969;McCarty and others, 1970b).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They found a good correlation with their clinical assessment of the activity of the joint disease. Whaley, Pack, Boyle, Dick, Downie, Buchanan, and Gillespie (1968), Green andHays (1969), andMcCarty, Polcyn, andCollins (1970a) applied scanning and scintiphotographic techniques over normal and diseased joints after intravenous injections of radio-technetium (M99 TcO4). All these methods measure primarily the vascularity of the synovial tissue, although the radioactivity may be increased slightly by accumulation of the tagged material in joint effusions (Weiss and others, 1965;McCarty, Polcyn, Collins, and Gottschalk, 1970b) and by synovial tissue binding in the case of radiotechnetium (Green and Hays, 1969;McCarty and others, 1970b).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These joints were as follows: shoulders (2), elbows (2), wrists (2), metacarpophalangeal (10), proximal interphalangeal (10), distal interphalangeal (8), hips (2), knees (2), ankles (2), metatarsophalangeal (2) and forefeet (2). Since sacroiliac joint is not a commonly involved joint, it was not evaluated in RA.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In inflammatory joint disease, the uptake of diphosphonates in bone is either secondary to increased blood flow to periarticular bone, or is related to new bone formation with diphosphonate absorbed on the surface of hydroxyapatite crystals or is a combination of both factors (1). Bone scintigraphy appeared to be a sensitive method for detecting inflammatory joint disease, however the disadvantage of bone scintigraphy is its’ low specificity (1,7,8,9). Other radiopharmaceuticals such as Ga-67 (10,11), radiolabelled leucocytes (12), In-111 chloride (13), 99m Tc labelled liposomes (14) were demonstrated to accumulate in inflammed area in arthritis, however these agents have not been used in routine clinical practice (15).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…of the apparatus was such that it could easily be used in a side room of an outpatient clinic. In the initial studies, sodium perchlorate was administered to each patient to block uptake of technetium by the thyroid but this did not have any effect on the uptake over joints when omitted, an observation made by McCarty et al (5). The possible effect of displacement of technetium from its binding sites by highly protein bound drugs was considered in this study but no changes attributable to this phenomenon could be detected.…”
mentioning
confidence: 86%