Literature DB >> 9025738

Photopenia in chronic vertebral osteomyelitis with technetium-99m-antigranulocyte antibody (BW 250/183).

S Gratz1, H G Braun, T M Behr, J Meller, A Herrmann, M Conrad, D Rathmann, R Bertagnoli, H G Willert, W Becker.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Photon-deficient areas in 99mTc/111 in white blood cell (WBC) images for diagnosing vertebral osteomyelitis have been published often. This study retrospectively evaluated whether the use of 99mTc-labeled monoclonal antigranulocyte antibodies (BW 250/183) is superior to WBC and whether it offers higher specificity.
METHODS: The study included 81 patients (46 men, 35 women; mean age 55 +/- 2 yr; from 1989 to 1995) with clinically suspected vertebral osteomyelitis who underwent scintigraphic imaging after intravenous injection of 555 MBq 99mTc-labeled monoclonal antigranulocyte antibodies. Forty patients suffered from osteomyelitis (20 men, 20 women; mean age 56 +/- 6 yr), 6 patients had metastases, 28 patients had spondylosis and disk herniation and 5 patients vertebral compression fractures. Diagnosis was not histologically verified in 2 patients. Planar imaging was performed at 4 and 24 hr postinjection. Histology of osteomyelitis was available in 30 patients, clinical follow-up in 10 patients. Visual uptake scores and quantitative uptake scores of the suspected areas were calculated. The results were compared to a semiquantitative histological score (high, medium, low grade) as well as to the scintigraphic scores.
RESULTS: Scintigraphy showed photopenia in all patients with histologically proven vertebral osteomyelitis, independent of the grade of infection. A quantitative evaluation of 4 and 24 hr postinjection demonstrated a 58% increase of the uptake score in cases of histologically proven high-grade infections. This increase was seen predominantly in the thoracic spine but not in lumbar spine. All nonosseous paravertebral abscesses (n = 2) showed positive images and an increasing uptake over 24 hr.
CONCLUSION: Paravertebral soft tissue infections can be differentiated excellently, whereas vertebral osteomyelitis, vertebral tumors or fractures can be localized, but no differentiation is possible.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9025738

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nucl Med        ISSN: 0161-5505            Impact factor:   10.057


  5 in total

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  5 in total

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