| Literature DB >> 24897023 |
Barbara Palumbo1, Tommaso Buresta2, Susanna Nuvoli3, Angela Spanu4, Orazio Schillaci5, Mario Luca Fravolini6, Isabella Palumbo7.
Abstract
Nuclear medicine techniques (single photon emission computerized tomography, SPECT, and positron emission tomography, PET) represent molecular imaging tools, able to provide in vivo biomarkers of different diseases. To investigate brain tumours and metastases many different radiopharmaceuticals imaged by SPECT and PET can be used. In this review the main and most promising radiopharmaceuticals available to detect brain metastases are reported. Furthermore the diagnostic contribution of the combination of SPECT and PET data with radiological findings (magnetic resonance imaging, MRI) is discussed.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24897023 PMCID: PMC4100127 DOI: 10.3390/ijms15069878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 12-Deoxy-[18F]fluoro-d-glucose(18FDG), positron emission tomography(PET)/computerized tomography (CT) image (transaxial section) of a patient with a metastasis in the left cerebellum deriving from non-small-cell-lung cancer (NSCLC). The metastasis appears as an area of hyperfixation of 18FDG in the context of normal cerebellar parenchyma with homogeneous and symmetrical radiopharmaceutical distribution.
Figure 2Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) (at the top), 99 mTc-MIBI SPECT (in the middle) and fused image of 99 mTc-MIBI single-photon emission computerized tomography (SPECT)and MRI (at the bottom) in transaxial, coronal and sagittal sections of a metastasis in the left cerebellum deriving from non-small-cell lung cancer(NSCLC, same patient of Figure 1). The left cerebellar metastasis appears as an area of hyperfixation of 99 mTc-MIBI in the context of normal cerebellar parenchyma without radiopharmaceutical distribution. MRI shows the morphological alteration and the precise anatomical site of the metastasis. Fusion imaging SPECT/MRI allows to anatomically locate the position of the metastasis by MRI, evidenced as an area of selective radiopharmaceutical uptake by 99 mTc-MIBI SPECT images.