In patients with PD without autonomic failure, only cardiac MIBG uptake was severely reduced in the earliest phase of the disease (stage I). Parkinsonian syndromes other than PD did not demonstrate significant reduction in MIBG uptake in any organs except for the lower legs in MSA. In patients with PD without autonomic failure, reduction in MIBG uptake occurs selectively in the heart; this is considered to be a specific finding for PD and useful for the differential diagnosis of the parkinsonian syndromes.
A 62-year-old man presented newly developed tachyarrhythmia diagnosed as paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (PAF) and was treated with flecainide and enalapril. He underwent a whole-body F-18 fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) scan for cancer screening. The FDG-PET images showed a FDG non-avid lesion in the mid mediastinum. He was referred to our hospital for further examination under suspicion of a cardiac tumor in the left atrium. A chest computed tomography scan and magnetic resonance imaging revealed a bronchogenic cyst just under the carina and also compressed left atrium and pulmonary vein from its cranial portion. The cyst was completely excised. After the operation, PAF was stopped and sinus rhythm was preserved. PAF was thought to be due to compression by the bronchogenic cyst.
A 72-year-old woman with hypertension showed no sign of myocardial accumulation of 123I-BMIPP, and 201Tl and 123I-MIBG scintigraphy demonstrated normal findings. Electrocardiography showed left axis deviation with inverted T waves in leads I, aVL, V2-6 and QT prolongation. Coronary arteriography, two dimensional echo cardiography and laboratory data showed no abnormality. Her 66-year-old sister with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus also had no myocardial BMIPP uptake, but had normal 201Tl finding. ECG and chest film findings were normal. Laboratory data indicated slightly high fasted blood glucose, triglyceride and total cholesterol. Four sons of a 72-year-old woman also underwent BMIPP scintigraphy. No BMIPP uptake was also observed in her 2nd son (49 years old) and his electrocardiogram showed QT prolongation. Since these rare findings indicating no myocardial BMIPP uptake were seen in a family, we suspected that a hereditary myocardial metabolic abnormality accounted for them.
Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy with wall motion analysis is known to enhance accuracy in diagnosing ischemic heart disease. The purpose of this study is to determine the best method to evaluate regional wall motion in a gated planar perfusion study. Planar gated 99mTc tetrofosmin (GTF) study in two projections was performed after rest-exercise sequence SPECT studies (n = 29). To evaluate wall motion, cine-mode display, wall thickening, and inverted tetrofosmin studies including ventricular inner border tracing, segmental wall shortening and functional images were used. The results were compared with gated blood-pool (GBP) study in the same projections. In the GTF study, functional image identified asynergy significantly better than cinematic display. The best correlation between GTF and GBP studies was observed with functional images of phase and amplitude, with complete visual agreement seen in 145 of 168 (86%) segments. With quantitative analysis by means of regions of interest (n = 280), a good correlation was observed between GTF and GBP regarding regional amplitude (r = 0.78), regional phase (r = 0.84), average left ventricular phase (r = 0.91) and standard deviation of phase values (r = 0.90). The value for the count-based "ejection fraction" derived from inverted GTF showed insufficient correlation to that of the GBP study (r = 0.69). Functional imaging with myocardial perfusion imaging is a simple and effective means to evaluate ventricular asynergy. Similar diagnostic criteria to gated blood-pool imaging and comparable diagnostic accuracy are advantages of this approach.
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