1.The Current Status of SPECT or SPECT/CT in South Korea
Ikdong YOO ; Eun Kyoung CHOI ; Yong An CHUNG
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2017;51(2):101-105
The first step to nuclear medicine in Korea started with introduction of the gamma camera in 1969. Although planar images with the gamma camera give important functional information, they have the limitations that result from 2-dimensional images. Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) due to its 3-dimensional image acquisition is superior to earlier planar gamma imaging in image resolution and diagnostic accuracy. As demand for a hybrid functional and anatomical imaging device has increased, integrated SPECT/CT systems have been used. In Korea, SPECT/CT was for the first time installed in 2003. SPECT/CT can eliminate many possible pitfalls on SPECT-alone images, making better attenuation correction and thereby improving image quality. Therefore, SPECT/CT is clinically preferred in many hospitals in various aspects.More recently, additional SPECT/CT images taken from the region with equivocal uptake on planar images have been helpful in making precise interpretation as part of their clinical workup in postoperative thyroid cancer patients. SPECT and SPECT/CT have various advantages, but its clinical application has gradually decreased in recent few years. While some researchers investigated the myocardial blood flow with cardiac PET using F-18 FDG or N-13 ammonia, myocardial perfusion SPECT is, at present, the radionuclide imaging study of choice for the risk stratification and guiding therapy in the coronary artery disease patients in Korea. New diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals for AD have received increasing attention; nevertheless, brain SPECT will remain the most reliable modality evaluating cerebral perfusion.
Ammonia
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Brain
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Coronary Artery Disease
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Gamma Cameras
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Humans
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Korea
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Nuclear Medicine
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Perfusion
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Radionuclide Imaging
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Radiopharmaceuticals
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Thyroid Neoplasms
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Tomography, Emission-Computed
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Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
2.Visual and Quantitative Analysis of Cisternography for the Detection of Cerebrospinal Fluid Leakage
Eun Kyoung CHOI ; Jin Kyoung OH ; Sonya Youngju PARK ; Ikdong YOO ; Dong Hyun KIM ; Yong An CHUNG
Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine 2017;51(2):193-194
We herein present a case of a 29-year-old man with clear rhinorrhea, which persisted for 8 years following a myringotomy. After cotton pledgets were placed in several different regions of the nasal cavity, cisternography using Tc-99m DTPA was performed to measure the radioactivity of each pledget. Cisternography showed subtle uptake in the nasal cavity. However, intense uptake was detected in the pledget placed in the right eustachian tube orifice, where the pledget:serum count ratio was 10.3:1. The patient underwent duroplasty and cranioplasty, and the rhinorrhea resolved.
Adult
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Cerebrospinal Fluid Leak
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Cerebrospinal Fluid Rhinorrhea
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Cerebrospinal Fluid
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Eustachian Tube
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Humans
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Nasal Cavity
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Pentetic Acid
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Radioactivity
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Radionuclide Imaging