| Literature DB >> 31579359 |
Luca Filippi1, Barbara Sardella2, Orazio Schillaci3,4, Oreste Bagni1.
Abstract
Lymphadenitis, due to typical or atypical Mycobacterium, is a clinical condition frequently associated with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Differential diagnosis between benign and malignant causes may be a challenge for clinicians. In this regard, the role of positron emission tomography (PET) with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) has still not been fully explored. We describe a case of 30-year-old male, infected by HIV, with mycobacterial lymphadenitis, in which 18FDG-PET and PET-derived parameters resulted useful for guiding diagnosis and monitoring the response to treatment. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography; Mycobacterium; human immunodeficiency virus; lymphadenitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31579359 PMCID: PMC6771195 DOI: 10.4103/ijnm.IJNM_125_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nucl Med ISSN: 0974-0244
Figure 1Whole-body 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography–computed tomography (a, maximum intensity projection image) demonstrates highly increased fluorodeoxyglucose uptake corresponding to supra-diaphragmatic lymph nodes (black arrow) and to a conglomerate mass in the abdomen (black countered arrow), as well evident in the fused axial (b) and coronal (c) positron emission tomography–computed tomography corresponding slices. The calculation of the whole-body total lesion glycolysis resulted of 2128.5 g
Figure 2(a) Biopsy of the conglomerate mass in the abdomen. Lymph node almost all completely employed by foamy macrophages (H and E stain, 4×). (b) Foamy macrophages containing many corpuscles in the cytoplasm (H and E stain, ×50). (c) Corpuscles in the cytoplasm resulting strongly positive for acid-fast organisms (ZN stain, ×50)
Figure 3Whole-body 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography–computed tomography (a, maximum intensity projection image) acquires 2 months after antimycobacterial therapy demonstrates complete regression of the supra-diaphragmatic lymph nodes and significant regression of the conglomerate mass in the abdomen, as well evident in the fused axial (b) and coronal (c) positron emission tomography–computed tomography corresponding slices. The calculation of the whole-body total lesion glycolysis resulted of 304.7 g