Sean N Reynolds1, Janusz Kikut2. 1. Diagnostic Radiology, The University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, VT, USA. sean.reynolds@vtmednet.org. 2. Nuclear Medicine and Diagnostic Radiology, The University of Vermont Medical Center, Burlington, VT, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multiple disposable syringe designs are available both with and without silicone lubricant. Tc99m sestamibi variably adheres to certain syringe designs. In practice, this increases pre-injection activity to ensure constant acceptable image quality in the setting of high adherence. METHODS: The residual activity following 35 Tc99m MDP injections was used as a proxy for the dead-space residual activity. This was compared to Tc99m sestamibi injections in the same syringe in 107 injections, a syringe without lubricant in 35 injections, and a syringe without lubricant or rubber gasket in 16 injections. The syringe with lubricated barrel was disassembled and each part separately assayed to see which part demonstrated the most adherence. RESULTS: The standard design demonstrated a mean adherence of 26% (SD 7.0%). This was significantly more than the 6% (SD 3.7%) demonstrated with MDP. The two designs without silicone lubricant demonstrated mean adherence of 7.2% (SD 2.3%) and 6.4% (SD 2.3%). Disassembly of the three part syringe showed the greatest adherence to the rubber gasket. CONCLUSIONS: QC procedures determining adherence in the administration syringe are warranted for any change in syringe design or manufacturer. If adherence is present, conversion to non-lubricated plastic syringes with lower and more predictable retention of Tc99m sestamibi enables more precise titration of prescribed activities and reduction of overall patient absorbed doses.
BACKGROUND: Multiple disposable syringe designs are available both with and without silicone lubricant. Tc99m sestamibi variably adheres to certain syringe designs. In practice, this increases pre-injection activity to ensure constant acceptable image quality in the setting of high adherence. METHODS: The residual activity following 35 Tc99m MDP injections was used as a proxy for the dead-space residual activity. This was compared to Tc99m sestamibi injections in the same syringe in 107 injections, a syringe without lubricant in 35 injections, and a syringe without lubricant or rubber gasket in 16 injections. The syringe with lubricated barrel was disassembled and each part separately assayed to see which part demonstrated the most adherence. RESULTS: The standard design demonstrated a mean adherence of 26% (SD 7.0%). This was significantly more than the 6% (SD 3.7%) demonstrated with MDP. The two designs without silicone lubricant demonstrated mean adherence of 7.2% (SD 2.3%) and 6.4% (SD 2.3%). Disassembly of the three part syringe showed the greatest adherence to the rubber gasket. CONCLUSIONS: QC procedures determining adherence in the administration syringe are warranted for any change in syringe design or manufacturer. If adherence is present, conversion to non-lubricated plastic syringes with lower and more predictable retention of Tc99m sestamibi enables more precise titration of prescribed activities and reduction of overall patient absorbed doses.
Authors: Manuel D Cerqueira; Kevin C Allman; Edward P Ficaro; Christopher L Hansen; Kenneth J Nichols; Randall C Thompson; William A Van Decker; Marko Yakovlevitch Journal: J Nucl Cardiol Date: 2010-08 Impact factor: 5.952