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R Quirce,
I Martínez-Rodríguez,
M De Arcocha Torres, J F Jiménez-Bonilla,
I Banzo,
M Rebollo,
M A Revilla,
E Palacio,
A Rubio-Vassallo,
F Ortega-Nava,
R Del Castillo-Matos,
J M Carril
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ABSTRACT: AIM: To assess the calcification process of the carotid plaque by (18)F-sodium fluoride PET/CT imaging. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A prospectively designed study including 15 patients in whom an atheroma plaque was detected by contrast enhanced CT scan during a neurological work-up was performed. A total of 29 plaques, 19 asymptomatic and 10 symptomatic, were studied. An (18)F-sodium fluoride PET/CT scan was acquired 180min after the i.v. injection of 370 MBq of (18)F-sodium fluoride in all the patients. The images obtained were analyzed visually according to the intensity of the uptake. RESULTS: All the plaques showed (18)F-sodium fluoride uptake, regardless of the intensity. However, the plaques of the symptomatic group showed a level of 2 or greater intensity while the intensity in 6 of the 19 in the asymptomatic group was lower than 2. CONCLUSIONS: Although the study is limited by the small number of cases, the results show the feasibility of the technique to study the calcification of the atheroma using (18)F-sodium fluoride and suggest an association between symptomatology and higher uptake of (18)F-sodium fluoride. Thus, these results encourage us to continue this study, with the inclusion of a larger number of patients.
Revista espanola de medicina nuclear e imagen molecular. 10/2012;
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ABSTRACT: In 65 type I diabetic patients we prospectively evaluated brain perfusion by means of single-photon emission tomography after the injection of 740- 1110 MBq of technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime. Thirty-five of the patients presented complications secondary to their diabetes. None showed CNS symptoms. A semiquantitative analysis was performed drawing 50 symmetrical regions of interest (ROIs) per patient. The relative contribution of each ROI to the total blood flow in each slice was compared with the relative contribution of the same ROI in a control group of ten healthy volunteers. Relative values of any ROI in the study group higher or lower than the mean +/-2 SD in respect of the same ROI in the control group were considered abnormal. The results revealed hypoperfusion in 207 ROIs in the 65 patients with diabetes mellitus: of these ROIs, 113 were frontal, 10 frontotemporal, 20 temporal, 18 parietal, 11 occipital and 35 cerebellar. A total of 137 ROIs showed hyperperfusion: 17 frontal, 3 frontotemporal, 19 temporal, 18 parietal, 19 parieto-occipital, 29 occipital and 32 cerebellar. Out of 65 type I diabetic patients, 61 showed at least one hypoperfused ROI (P = 0.0064 vs. controls) and 25 showed more than three hypoperfused ROIs. None of the control subjects showed more than three hypoperfused regions (P<0.001). The results obtained demonstrate the existence of subclinical abnormalities of brain blood perfusion in patients with type I diabetes mellitus and no history of cerebrovascular disease, thereby allowing the initiation of intensive preventive measures.
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine 01/1998; 24(12):1507-13.
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ABSTRACT: We analyzed the significance of total body scintigraphy with 201Tl in the follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer, both in the preablation and ablated stages.
Prospective assessment was performed in 116 patients who were involved in 178 studies (115 in preablation and 63 after ablation). For ablation, an absence of uptake in the thyroid bed was required in the total 131I follow-up scan after 131I ablation therapy. Each study consisted of a 201Tl scan performed while the patient was receiving thyroid hormone therapy, an 131I scan performed when endogenous thyroid-stimulating hormone levels were higher than 50 mlU/ml and determination of thyroglobulin (Tg) concentration using the same sample.
In the 115 scans in the preablation group, the findings for 201Tl and 131I agreed in 26 scans and disagreed in 89 scans. In 59 discordant studies, only 131I detected focal accumulation, and, in 54 of these, Tg levels were undetectable. Of the other 30 discordant studies, 201Tl and 131I detected focal uptake in 27 studies, although they did not reveal the same lesions, and in 3 studies, only 201Tl detected focal accumulation; in these 30 studies, the association of detectable Tg predominated. Of the 63 studies in the ablated group, the results agreed for the two tracers in 49 and disagreed in 14 studies. In 13 of the 14 discordant studies, 201Tl detected focal uptake, and, in 10 of these, Tg was detectable. Thus, 31 of the 116 patients assessed (15 preablation and 16 ablated) had at least one lesion that was detected by 201Tl but not detected by 131I. A definitive diagnosis could be established in 26 patients, and the presence of thyroid cancer was confirmed in 23. The sensitivity and specificity in the ablated group were 94% and 96%, respectively, for 201Tl and 29% and 100%, respectively, for 131I.
The high sensitivity of 201Tl scintigraphy in detecting tumor tissue indicates that the inclusion of this technique in the follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma should be considered in both the preablation and the ablated stages.
Journal of Nuclear Medicine 06/1997; 38(5):686-92. · 6.38 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Several studies have demonstrated the effective use of adjuvant treatment with Imatinib mesylate for unresectable, metastatic or recurrent gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST). We retrospectively evaluated the role of 18F-FDG PET/CT scanning in assessing the response of GIST patients to imatinib mesylate therapy.
Eight consecutive patients with GIST confirmed by surgery (4 stomach, 2 small bowel, 1 small bowel and peritoneum, and 1 rectum) underwent eighteen 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging after beginning imatinib mesylate therapy (400 mg/day or greater if disease progression). PET/CT scan was acquired 60-90 minutes after the intravenous injection of 333-707 MBq of 18F-FDG. Visual and semiquantitative (standardized uptake value [SUV]) analysis of images was performed. Response to therapy was assessed according to EORTC recommendations for PET. Results were confirmed by clinical follow-up, radiographic findings or histological analysis.
Complete response to imatinib mesylate was observed in 5 patients. Four had abdominal lymph nodes, associated with liver metastases in 2, and the other had a residual tumour mass. Partial response (reduction in SUV and in the extent of FDG uptake) was demonstrated in a patient with lung nodules. Disease progression was observed in one patient who had developed new liver metastases on the PET/CT scan. One patient with multiple peritoneal implants and abdominal mass was a non-responder and died 2 months after the 18F-FDG PET/CT.
18F-FDG PET/CT scan identified the degree of GIST response to imatinib therapy. Patients who responded to therapy showed normalisation of FDG uptake or a decrease in the SUV of lesions.
Revista Española de Medicina Nuclear 27(3):168-75. · 0.89 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Oncological FDG PET show variants and findings that may lead to a diagnostic error and that may be clarified by the morfofunctional imaging from PET/CT. In this article we show the experience acquired since a Siemens PET/CT Biograph LSO Pico3D was applied in our centre. We describe some representative examples of FDG distribution patterns which may lead to erroneous interpretations of the clinical studies when they refer to specific clinical situations. The examples included are classified into two main groups according to the cause: Technical and biological, and the latter into physiological and non-physiological (pathophysiological). Patterns are described within the biological group showing changes of the FDG biodistribution that may reduce the uptake in tumoural lesions, the physiological variants that may be interpreted as pathology, the effects of previous treatment and uptakes related to benign diseases. Conclusion: We consider that knowledge of these variants and findings to be crucial in order to obtain optimal performance of PET/CT and to overcome the PET limitations.
Revista Española de Medicina Nuclear 27(2):130-59. · 0.89 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The prevalence of stroke is increased in diabetic patients. The vasoconstrictor peptide endothelin-1 (ET-1) has been implicated in the development of cerebral vasospasm after stroke but its role in the physiological regulation of cerebral blood flow (CBF) is not well known. Our aim was to assess the relationship between CBF and plasma ET-1 levels in type I diabetic patients. Regional CBF was assessed semi-quantitatively by 99Tc(m)-hexamethylpropylene-amine-oxime (99Tc(m)-HMPAO) single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in 50 cerebral "regions of interest" (ROIs) of 19 type I diabetic patients without clinical evidence of cerebral disease, and 10 healthy control subjects. In both groups, plasma ET-1 levels were measured. Results showed that type I diabetic patients had significantly more hypoperfusion ROIs than control subjects. While up to 68.4% of the type I diabetic patients showed 3 or more hypoperfusion ROIs, only 10% of the control subjects did. Plasma ET-1 levels were lower in the type I diabetes subgroup with 3 or more hypoperfusion ROIs than in the type I diabetes subgroup with less than 3 hypoperfusion ROIs and in the control group. Moreover, an inverse correlation between the number of hypoperfusion ROIs and plasma ET-1 levels (r = 0.47, p = 0.04) was found in the type I diabetes group. It is concluded that plasma ET-1 is decreased in type I diabetic patients with subclinical abnormalities of regional CBF assessed by cerebral SPECT. This fact may reflect a compensatory response to the reduction of the brain perfusion in order to prevent ischemic events in these patients.
Journal of Diabetes and its Complications 13(5-6):325-31. · 2.03 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: To assess the status of cerebral perfusion in patients with eating disorders (ED) in the acute phase of the disease.
Seventeen patients, with a mean age of 22 years, diagnosed with ED according to DSM-III-R (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) criteria and under close clinical monitoring were studied in the initial acute phase of their disease. Brain SPECT with 15 mCi of Tc99m HMPAO was performed on all patients and assessed using visual and semi-quantitative analysis. The latter was carried out by obtaining left/right indices in sixteen symmetrical 5 x 5 pixel regions of interest (ROI) in three transverse slices, one below the cantho-meatal line and two above, at 2 and 5 cm, respectively. RESULTS; Visual analysis showed hypoperfusion of the anteroinferior region of the left temporal lobe in 7/17 patients, and in the homonymous region of the right temporal lobe in 1/17. Semi-quantitative analysis did not show statistically significant differences in the slices above the cantho-meatal line when the means of the asymmetry indices were compared between the anterior (frontal), middle (temporal and parietal) and posterior (occipital) regions of each slice, obtaining values ranging between 0.99 +/- 0.05 and 1.02 +/- 0.03. However, in the lowest slice, the anterior (temporal) region showed a mean asymmetry value of 0.89 +/- 0.15, and on comparing it with the mean of the asymmetry indices of the posterior region (cerebellum), it showed a statistically significant difference (p < 0.05).
Patients with ED frequently show hypoperfusion of the anteroinferior region of the temporal lobe, predominantly in the left hemisphere, in the acute phase of the illness.
Revista Española de Medicina Nuclear 27(5):350-4. · 0.89 Impact Factor