35 research outputs found

    Myocardial perfusion and viability by positron emission tomography in infants and children with coronary abnormalities correlation with echocardiography,coronary angiography, and histopathology

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    AbstractObjectivesThis study was designed to assess the feasibility and accuracy of positron emission tomography (PET) imaging in infants and children.BackgroundPositron emission tomography is employed in adults for the evaluation of myocardial perfusion and the detection of myocardial viability.MethodsPerfusion and metabolism findings on PET in infants and children with suspected coronary abnormalities (age 14 days to 12 years old, mean 3.3 ± 4.0 years) were correlated with findings on coronary angiography, echocardiography, and myocardial histopathology. The segmental myocardial uptake of the flow tracer 13N-ammonia and of the glucose tracer 18F-deoxyglucose (18FDG) was graded on a five-point scale and compared with the angiographic perfusion score, with regional wall motion, and the presence of fibrosis.ResultsThere was an agreement of r = 0.72 (p < 0.05) between regional myocardial perfusion and angiography. The correlation of histopathologic changes with normal, moderately, and severely reduced segmental 13N-ammonia uptake was 87%, 60%, and 75%, respectively. Segmental myocardial 18FDG uptake and histopathologic findings were concordant in 48 (79%) of 64 segments without fibrosis; absence of viability by perfusion and metabolism imaging correlated with the presence of fibrosis in 21 (84%) of 25 segments.ConclusionsThe observed agreements between the findings on PET perfusion and metabolism imaging with those on coronary angiography, echocardiography, and histopathology support the utility and accuracy of PET for characterizing myocardial perfusion abnormalities and viability in pediatric patients

    Melatonin atheroprotective effects in vivo

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    Chronic inflammatory fibro-proliferative changes leading to atherosclerotic plaques are considered hallmark of cardiovascular diseases [1]. Atherosclerosis pathogenesis is a complex entity, which has not been fully understood; however, many studies have demonstrated the role of oxidative stress and inflammation in its development. Melatonin effects on inflammation and oxidative stress process have been demonstrated in the last ten-year literature [2]. However, its role(s) and mechanism(s) of action as a therapeutic tool against atherosclerosis remain largely unexplored. Our aims were to assess the role of melatonin in the onset and developing of atherosclerotic plaques through radiologic and morphometrical tools in 20 apolipoprotein-E knockout (ApoE) mice fed with Western diet (42% calories from fat). 10/20 mice were treated with melatonin (10 mg/kg per os). 18F-FDG PET-CT is a widely used tool to assess inflammatory changes, even before macroscopic changes have taken place. Glucose metabolism is known to be higher in areas of inflammation due to an increased expression of GLUT transporters on the cell membranes both in animals and humans. Using this feature PET/CT is able to determinate metabolic cellular changes and therefore it can be used as biomarker of atherosclerosis. All mice were scanned both before starting melatonin treatment and at the end of the study. After the last scan mice were sacrificed and vascular remodeling, oxidative stress and inflammation at aortic arch level were evaluated. CT-corrected PET datasets were used for computation of SUVmax. Atherosclerotic vascular remodeling, oxidative stress and inflammation levels were significantly more conspicuous in the control cohort, compared to the treated mice (p≤0.05). 18F-FDG PET/CT did not show significant difference in SUVmax. In summary, also in vivo, melatonin may have a protective effect in the atherosclerotic pathogenesis. Flamma S.p.A.-Italy (www.flammagroup.com) provided with melatonin. Financial supports: Fondazione Cariplo e Regione Lombardia “New opportunities and ways towards ERC” (Project 2014-2256) and University of California - Radiology and Biomedical Imaging Nuclear Medicine Section

    The Incidence of Pulmonary Embolism and Associated FDG-PET Findings in IV Contrast-Enhanced PET/CT

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    Rationale and objectivesMost fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography with computed tomography (PET/CT) studies are performed on cancer patients. These patients are at increased risk of pulmonary embolism (PE). In this retrospective review, we determined the rate of PE, and the prevalence of associated FDG-PET findings on intravenous (IV) contrast-enhanced PET/CT.Materials and methodsWe identified all PET/CT studies performed at our institution with a reported finding of PE between January 2005 and October 2012. The medical record was reviewed for symptoms, which were identified after the diagnosis of PE, and whether the patients received treatment. The prevalence of associated FDG-PET findings was determined.ResultsA total of 65 total cases of PE (of 182,72 total PET/CT examinations) were identified of which 59 were previously unknown. This gives an incidental PE (IPE) rate of 0.32%. Of the patients where sufficient clinical information was available, 34 of 36 (94%) were treated either with therapeutic anticoagulation or inferior vena cava filter, and 30 of 36 (83%) were asymptomatic in retrospect. Of the patients with IPE, we found nine (15.2%) with associated focal pulmonary artery hypermetabolism, three (5.1%) with hypermetabolic pulmonary infarction, and one with increased isolated right ventricular FDG uptake (1.7%). One case of chronic PE demonstrated a focal hypometabolic filling defect in a pulmonary artery on PET.ConclusionsWe found IPE in 0.32% of PET/CT scans. Focal pulmonary artery hypermetabolism or hypometabolism, and hypermetabolic pulmonary artery infarction with the "rim sign" were uncommonly associated with PE. These findings could raise the possibility of IPE in non-IV contrast-enhanced PET/CT studies

    Poster display IV experimental and instrumentation

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    FDG PET/CT evaluation of pathologically proven pulmonary lesions in an area of high endemic granulomatous disease

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    PURPOSE: The goal of this study is to assess how reliable the threshold maximum standardized uptake value (maxSUV) of 2.5 on positron emission tomography–computed tomography (PET/CT) is for evaluation of solitary pulmonary lesions in an area of endemic granulomatous disease and to consider other imaging findings that may increase the accuracy of PET/CT. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The staging PET/CT of 72 subjects with solitary pulmonary lesions (nodules (less than 3 cm) or masses (greater than 3 cm)) were retrospectively reviewed. Pathology proven diagnosis from tissue samples was used as the gold standard. Logistic regression was used to assess whether the subject’s age, maxSUV, size of lesion, presence of emphysema, or evidence of granulomatous disease was predictive of malignancy. RESULTS: Malignant lesions were identified in 84.7 % (61/72) of the 72 subjects. A threshold maxSUV of 2.5 had a sensitivity of 95.1 % (58/61), specificity of 45.5 % (5/11), positive predictive value of 90.6 % (58/64), negative predictive value of 62.5 % (5/8) and an accuracy of 87.5 % (63/72). The false negative rate was 4.9 %, and the false positive rate was 54.5 %. All 3 false negatives were less than or equal to 1.0 cm; however, false positives ranged from 1.1 to 5.6 cm. The false negatives had a mean (SD) maxSUV of 2.0 (0.4), whereas the false positives had a mean (SD) maxSUV of 5.6 (3.0). Emphysema was associated with 1.1 higher odds of malignancy, and evidence of granulomatous disease was associated with 0.34 lower odds of benign disease, however, neither was statistically significant (p = 0.92 and p = 0.31, respectively). Higher maxSUV was significantly associated with increased risk of malignancy (p = 8.3 × 10(−3)). Older age and larger size of lesion were borderline associated with increased risk of malignancy (p = 0.05 and p = 0.07, respectively). CONCLUSION: In an area of high endemic granulomatous disease, the PET/CT threshold maxSUV of 2.5 retains a high sensitivity (95.1 %) and positive predictive value (90.6 %) for differentiating benign from malignant pulmonary lesions; however, the specificity (45.5) and negative predictive value (62.5) decrease due to increased false positives. The presence of emphysema and absence of evidence of granulomatous disease increases the probability that a pulmonary lesion is malignant; however, these were not statistically significant
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