The whole body 131-I scan remains an important component in the postoperative treatment of patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer. Because normal thyroid tissue remnants and residual or metastatic foci of well-differentiated thyroid cancer have the unique ability to concentrate, organify, and store 131-I, the whole body scan provides a depiction of those tissues that can be ablated with therapeutic doses of 131-I. Over time, it has become obvious that the whole body scan may also reveal foci of 131-i uptake owing to a wide variety of other causes. We provide a detailed pathophysiological classification of the artifacts, anatomic and physiological variants, and nonthyroidal diseases that may give rise to false-positive whole body scans in postoperative patients with thyroid cancer. These include ectopic foci of normal thyroid tissue; nonthyroidal physiological sites (eg, choroid plexus, salivary glands, gastric mucosa, urinary tract); contamination by physiological sections; ectopic gastric mucosa; other gastrointestinal abnormalities; urinary tract abnormalities; mammary abnormalities; serous cavities and cysts; inflammation and infection; nonthyroidal neoplasms; and currently unexplained causes. This article also provides a detailed review of the widely scattered English language literature in which these phenomena were originally described.

Rufini, V., Shapiro, B., Jarwan, A., Geatti, O., Kearfott, K. J., Fig, L. M., Kirkwood, I. D., Gross, M. D., Artifacts, anatomical and phisiological variants, and unrelated diseases that might cause false-positive whole-body 131-I scans in patients with thyroid cancer., <<SEMINARS IN NUCLEAR MEDICINE>>, 2000; 2000 (30(2)): 115-132 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/11292]

Artifacts, anatomical and phisiological variants, and unrelated diseases that might cause false-positive whole-body 131-I scans in patients with thyroid cancer.

Rufini, Vittoria;
2000

Abstract

The whole body 131-I scan remains an important component in the postoperative treatment of patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer. Because normal thyroid tissue remnants and residual or metastatic foci of well-differentiated thyroid cancer have the unique ability to concentrate, organify, and store 131-I, the whole body scan provides a depiction of those tissues that can be ablated with therapeutic doses of 131-I. Over time, it has become obvious that the whole body scan may also reveal foci of 131-i uptake owing to a wide variety of other causes. We provide a detailed pathophysiological classification of the artifacts, anatomic and physiological variants, and nonthyroidal diseases that may give rise to false-positive whole body scans in postoperative patients with thyroid cancer. These include ectopic foci of normal thyroid tissue; nonthyroidal physiological sites (eg, choroid plexus, salivary glands, gastric mucosa, urinary tract); contamination by physiological sections; ectopic gastric mucosa; other gastrointestinal abnormalities; urinary tract abnormalities; mammary abnormalities; serous cavities and cysts; inflammation and infection; nonthyroidal neoplasms; and currently unexplained causes. This article also provides a detailed review of the widely scattered English language literature in which these phenomena were originally described.
2000
Inglese
Rufini, V., Shapiro, B., Jarwan, A., Geatti, O., Kearfott, K. J., Fig, L. M., Kirkwood, I. D., Gross, M. D., Artifacts, anatomical and phisiological variants, and unrelated diseases that might cause false-positive whole-body 131-I scans in patients with thyroid cancer., <<SEMINARS IN NUCLEAR MEDICINE>>, 2000; 2000 (30(2)): 115-132 [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/11292]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/11292
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