CT is best for differentiation between soft-tissue and bone infection. MR imaging is best for assessment of the calvaria and skull base. SPECT is best for assessment of altered bone and may be the best technique for follow-up.
Serial bone scans and radiographs were assessed in 50 patients with breast cancer metastatic to bone treated with combination chemotherapy. In 34 patients evaluable nonosseous metastases were present in addition to bone lesions. Clinical and biochemical changes also were assessed serially, independent of skeletal disease. Pretherapy bone scans were more sensitive but less specific than radiographs for detection of osseous metastasis. Response to therapy in nonosseous metastasis correlated well with radiographic improvement of bone lesions (91%), but less well with changes in bone scans (57%). There was concordance between clinical and radiographic findings, suggesting progression of metastatic disease, in 81% of patients and between scan and clinical findings in 72% of them. Changes in carcinoembryonic antigen levels closely reflected clinical and radiographic changes. Serial bone radiographs are the most useful method of determining response to therapy in breast cancer metastatic to bone. The addition of scintigraphs and carcinoembryonic antigen measurements results in a highly sensitive and accurate method of response evaluation.
The authors assessed whether the whole-body radiation burden can be reduced with diuretic enhancement of iodine-131 excretion in patients with thyroid cancer and slow clearance. Whole-body imaging and quantitative I-131 clearance data obtained before and after ablation therapy were evaluated in 56 patients. Fourteen patients with slow pre-ablation therapy clearance (> 50% retention at 24 hours) received oral diuretics after I-131 therapy. Nine patients began taking furosemide 24 hours after I-131 treatment. Five patients had been receiving thiazide diuretics and were continued on the same dose after treatment. The mean half-time of I-131 clearance for the patients treated with furosemide decreased by 12 hours (P < .05) but was not significantly decreased for those who received thiazides or for the patients who did not receive diuretics. Administration of diuretics can improve I-131 clearance in patients with thyroid cancer and slow clearance, reducing the radiation burden and shortening the hospital stay.
Scintigraphy was used after injection of technetium-99m methylene diphosphonate (MDP) and indium-111-labeled white blood cells (WBCs) to assess for the presence of osteomyelitis in 97 patients who had undergone prior surgical procedures. Thirty-four patients with abnormal In-111-labeled WBC patterns underwent restudy with Tc-99m albumin colloid (AC). Scintigraphic findings were considered positive for osteomyelitis whenever localization of In-111-labeled WBCs exceeded Tc-99m AC activity in extent or focal intensity (discordant pattern). Ten of 12 patients with culture-proved osteomyelitis had discordant patterns; two had false-negative (concordant) patterns. The cases of 20 of 22 patients without infection who were considered to have osteomyelitis on the basis of patterns of In-111-labeled WBCs and Tc-99m MDP were reclassified correctly on the basis of concordant patterns of In-111-labeled WBCs and Tc-99m AC. Radiocolloid images improved the overall scintigraphic specificity for osteomyelitis from 59% without bone marrow imaging to 92%; sensitivity decreased from 94% to 88%.
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