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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology

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Imaging

Positive Liver SPECT Images Correlated With Normal or Equivocal CT Studies: Two Case Studies

Ken Wintch and Art Meyers
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology June 1994, 22 (2) 65-67;
Ken Wintch
Department of Radiological Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada
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Art Meyers
Department of Radiological Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada
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Abstract

Objective: The number of liver/spleen procedures has markedly decreased over the past number of years, coinciding with the advancement of computed tomography equipment. However, the development of SPECT and hepatobiliary radiopharmaceuticals has improved diagnostic ability.

Methods: Two patients were studied; one was a 64-yr-old male with possible cirrhosis and the other was a 48-yr-old female with abnormal liver function and a left-side mastectomy. Both patients were intravenously injected with 99mTc-sulfur colloid, and SPECT liver/spleen images were correlated with CT images.

Results: The SPECT scans detected abnormalities that were neither present nor differentiated from normal tissue on the CT images.

Conclusions: These case studies demonstrate that 99mTc-sulfur colloid SPECT correlated with CT can detect abnormalities that would be normal or equivocal when using CT alone.

  • Technetium-99m-sulfur colloid
  • liver/spleen scans
  • SPECT
  • CT
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Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology: 22 (2)
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology
Vol. 22, Issue 2
June 1, 1994
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Positive Liver SPECT Images Correlated With Normal or Equivocal CT Studies: Two Case Studies
Ken Wintch, Art Meyers
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology Jun 1994, 22 (2) 65-67;

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Positive Liver SPECT Images Correlated With Normal or Equivocal CT Studies: Two Case Studies
Ken Wintch, Art Meyers
Journal of Nuclear Medicine Technology Jun 1994, 22 (2) 65-67;
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Keywords

  • technetium-99m-sulfur colloid
  • liver/spleen scans
  • SPECT
  • CT
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