Calcification and uptake of Tc-99m diphosphonates in neuroblastomas: concise communication. (65/98)

Sixty-six percent of 54 patients with neuroblastoma demonstrated uptake of bone-seeking radioagents by the primary tumor. This is a higher incidence than previously reported. Uptake was slightly more common in abdominal than thoracic tumors. There was a significant correlation between the size of the tumor and tracer uptake. Calcification was demonstrated in the primary tumor in almost 90% of the 54 patients. This is a much higher incidence of calcification than previously reported. Microscopy shows that the calcification is not always due to tumor necrosis; it also occurs in areas of viable tumor cells. Tracer uptake is believed to be related to calcium metabolism. The rate of metabolic activity rather than the total amount of calcium present within the tumor may be the most important factor in determining the amount of uptake. No significant relationship was found between tracer uptake and tumor stage or homovanillic acid and vanillylmandelic acid metabolic activity.  (+info)

An adult case with rhabdomyosarcoma of the liver. (66/98)

An autopsy case of primary rhabdomyosarcoma of the liver in a 70-year-old man is described. The case could not be clinically differentiated from hepatocellular carcinoma. The tumor showed typical features of rhabdomyosarcoma; phosphotungstic acid hematoxylin (PTAH)-positive myofibrils and cross-striations were observed in the cytoplasm of highly plemorphic tumor cells.  (+info)

Uptake of Tc-99m di-isopropyliminodiacetic acid by hepatocellular carcinoma: concise communication. (67/98)

Uptake of Tc-99m di-isopropyliminodiacetic acid (DISIDA) by hepatocellular carcinoma was assessed in 30 patients showing obvious liver defects on a Tc-99m tin colloid image. In none of these patients was there complete "filling in" of the defects, and even partial "filling in" occurred in only 11 (36.7%). There was no uptake of Tc-99m DISIDA by the primary tumor in the remaining 19 patients (63.3%). In 19 of the 30 patients an attempt was made to correlate the degree of histologic differentiation of the tumor with the uptake of DISIDA by the tumor. No difference in uptake could be demonstrated between well, moderately, and poorly differentiated tumors. Tc-99m DISIDA was not taken up by pulmonary metastases in the only two patients tested. We conclude that imaging with Tc-99m DISIDA in conjunction with Tc-99m colloid is of no value in the specific diagnosis of hepatocellular carcinoma.  (+info)

Pyogenic vertebral osteomyelitis: diagnosis and management. (68/98)

Vertebral osteomyelitis represents a diagnostic challenge to the clinician. Two cases of pyogenic vertebral osteomyelitis occurring weeks to months after a urinary tract infection with Escherichia coli are described. The rarity and subtle clinical presentation of this condition, the presence of pre-existing degenerative arthritic changes, and delayed appearance of radiologic signs of progression to destructive osteomyelitis contributed to a significant delay in diagnosis. Increased awareness of vertebral osteomyelitis as a clinical entity combined with information from radionuclide scanning may permit earlier detection of this condition.  (+info)

Tc-99m diphosphonate and sulfur colloid uptake by the spleen in sickle disease: interrelationship and clinical correlates: concise communication. (69/98)

To determine the clinical significance of splenic uptake in bone scintigraphy and functional asplenia on the radionuclide liver-spleen image, bone and spleen scintigrams of 38 patients with sickle cell disease were reviewed. Eighteen underwent bone and liver-spleen studies, 15 had only bone images, and five had only liver-spleen studies. Sixteen of 33 who had bone scintigraphy showed splenic uptake, but the frequency of homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease was not greater than heterozygous sickle cell disease (S-hetero) in this group. SS patients with splenic uptake of Tc-99m diphosphonate had significantly fewer painful crises of the abdomen and extremities, and fewer inpatient and outpatient hospital visits than SS patients whose bone imaging did not visualize the spleen. Functional asplenia on liver-spleen images (16 cases) was seen only in SS disease. One SS patient, age 8, still had a spleen capable of phagocytizing colloid.  (+info)

Intraoperative lymph scintigraphy during radical surgery for cervical cancer. (70/98)

Intraoperative lymph scintigraphy during radical surgery for cervical cancer was developed in the course of a program covering three periods. During the last period technetium-99m antimony sulfide has been used to visualize pelvic lymph nodes. Surgery is done with a modified gamma camera serving as an operating table. This ensures intraoperative monitoring and greater thoroughness of lymphadenectomy. The introduction of the technique has improved the rate of total lymphadenectomies and has increased both the yields of involved nodes and the 3-yr survival rates.  (+info)

The relevance of internal mammary lymphoscintigraphy in the management of breast carcinoma. (71/98)

The incidence, implications, and significance of an abnormal internal mammary lymphoscintigram (IML) in 981 breast carcinoma patients without histologic or clinical evidence of axillary metastases is reported. A 13%-16% incidence of parasternal abnormality in patients with early, operable disease correlates well with clinical data. The statistically significant increase, with P consistently less than or equal to 0.005, in incidence of local or distant relapse associated with an abnormal IML when compared to the normal IML emphasizes the value of the procedure as a marker. These results indicate that patients with negative axillae but an abnormal IML should be considered to have stage II disease and should be offered adjuvant therapy. The significance of the IML in determining the true extent of disease in patients with apparent local relapse as well as the prognostic implications of an abnormal IML in 311 patients seen initially with recurrent breast carcinoma is also reported.  (+info)

Frozen shoulder: an arthrographic and radionuclear scan assessment. (72/98)

The diagnostic criteria and nomenclature used to describe the painful stiff shoulder remain confused. Arthrographic features of capsulitis have come to be accepted as characteristic of the frozen shoulder. Increased technetium uptake has also been noted. Both features have been considered to have possible prognostic and therapeutic importance. During a therapeutic study of strictly defined clinical frozen shoulder 35 of 38 patients showed increased technetium diphosphonate uptake in the affected shoulder in comparison with the opposite side. Of 36 patients who had arthrography 15 showed evidence of capsulitis, 11 rupture of the rotator cuff, and five no abnormality. Five tests failed owing to technical difficulty. There was no association between the technetium uptake and the arthrographic features, and neither was useful in predicting the rate or extent of recovery. Frozen shoulder of traumatic onset behaved no differently from that which arose spontaneously. We do not therefore consider that arthrography or technetium diphosphonate scanning performed at presentation contributes to the assessment of the painful stiff shoulder.  (+info)