RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 51Cr Red Blood Cells in the Study of Hematologic Disease: A Historical Review JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology JO J. Nucl. Med. Technol. FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 299 OP 305 DO 10.2967/jnmt.124.267702 VO 52 IS 4 A1 Hinkle, George H. YR 2024 UL http://tech.snmjournals.org/content/52/4/299.abstract AB The early years of nuclear medicine included the development and clinical use of several in vitro or nonimaging procedures. The use of radionuclides as replacements for nonradioactive dyes brought improved accuracies and less subjective measurements to indicator dilution studies of body compartments such as the gastrointestinal system, lungs, urinary system, and vascular space. A popular nuclear medicine procedure was the radionuclide dilution method for quantitation of whole-blood volume or red blood cell volume or mass using 51Cr-labeled red blood cells—an important diagnostic element in patients suspected of having polycythemia vera, congestive heart failure, hypertension, shock, syncope, and other abnormal blood volume disorders. The radionuclide dilution method led to improved evaluation of red blood cell survival, which is important for clinical treatment planning in anemia and confirmation of splenic sequestration of damaged red blood cells. Although it was discovered that 51Cr was a chemically stable radiolabel of red blood cells after binding to intracellular hemoglobin, few nuclear medicine departments offered the clinical study for referring physicians because it required laboratory expertise for technologists, patient coordination, and a time-consuming procedure. The introduction of improved methods that are less time-consuming and have clinically acceptable results, along with the discontinuation of the sodium chromate 51Cr injection radiopharmaceutical by manufacturers, has consigned 51Cr red blood cells for red blood cell volume, mass, or survival evaluation to the list of retired nuclear medicine studies.