RÉSUMÉ
Purpose@#123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) cardiac scintigraphy was a useful imaging modality for the diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, but its diagnostic performances were variably reported. This retrospective study compared the diagnostic performances and investigated the optimal imaging protocol of 123I-MIBG cardiac scintigraphy at various imaging time points in patients suspected of Parkinson’s disease in clinical practice. @*Methods@#In patients suspected of Parkinson’s disease, clinical records, autonomic function tests, and 123I-MIBG cardiac scintigraphy were retrospectively reviewed. Semi-quantitative parameters such as heart-to-mediastinum ratio (HMR) and washout rate (WR) were calculated and compared at 15 min, 1 h, 2 h, 3 h, and 4 h post-injection (p.i.). of 123I-MIBG cardiac scintigraphy. Group A consisted of Parkinson’s disease (PD), Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD), and dementia with Lewy body (DLB), and group B consisted of non-Parkinson’s diseases such as multiple system atrophy (MSA), progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), drug-induced parkinsonism (DIP), essential tremor (ET), Parkinson-plus syndrome (PPS), and unspecified secondary parkinsonism (NA). The diagnostic performances of HMR and WR were compared for differentiation of group A from group B, and their clinical usefulness and optimal imaging time points were explored. @*Results@#Seventy-eight patients were included in group A (67 PD, 7 PDD, 4 DLB), and 18 patients were included in group B (5 MSA, 3 PSP, 2 DIP, 2 ET, 1 PPS, and 1 NA). Sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value of HMR and WR were maximized at 4 h p.i., (82.1%, 85.7%, 82.6%, 97.0%, and 46.2%; cutoff threshold 24.1%; area under curve 0.8246), respectively, and PPVs of both HMR and WR persistently showed greater than 92.7% at earlier time points and shorter time intervals. @*Conclusion@#This study reassured that 4-h-delayed imaging is recommended for the best diagnostic performances in 123I-MIBG cardiac scintigraphy. Although it showed suboptimal diagnostic performances to differentiate PD, PDD, and DLB from non-Parkinson’s diseases, it can be useful as an auxiliary measure for the differential diagnosis in usual clinical practice.
RÉSUMÉ
Objective@#This study examined the characteristics of the patients taking poison intentionally at the pre-hospital stage to prevent it at the community level. @*Methods@#We retrospectively reviewed the data that had been reported to fire stations from January 2017 to December 2018. This data included sex, age, occupation, the season of the year, time, place, methods, alcohol ingestion, transferred to the hospital or not, and we examined how taking poison had an effect on the suicide success rate. @*Results@#The subjects were a total of 1,356 patients who had been reported to fire stations due to intentionally taking poison. Forty-five point five percent of them were male, and 54.5% were female. The most common method of intentional taking poison was sedatives (58.3%), followed by pesticides (24.6%), antidepressants (19.0%), and other methods (12.6%). The home place was preferred more than any other places. The suicide success rate was 2.1% in males and 1.4% in females. For the age groups, those patients 40-64 years old tried taking poison much more than the other age groups. In the aspect of the season of the year, summer was the highest season for taking poison, at 30.3%. The daytime was more preferred than the night time. @*Conclusion@#In this study, we analyzed the characteristics of the pre-hospital intentional poisoning cases according to gender, age, occupation, season of the year, time, and between the transferred and the untransferred groups. Efforts should be made in cooperation with the community to prevent suicide attempts by intentionally taking poison.
RÉSUMÉ
PURPOSE: We intended to evaluate myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2) by applying recirculation correction and modified one-compartment model to have a reference range of MVO2 in normal young population and to reveal the effect of recirculation on time-activity curve (TAC). Materials and METHODS: In nine normal male volunteers with mean age of 26.3+/-4.0, MVO2 was estimated with 925 MBq (25mCi) of 11C-Acetate (Neuroscience Research Institute, Gachon University of Medicine and Science, Incheon, Korea) and PET/CT (Biograph 6, Siemens Medical Solution, Germany). Analysis software such as MATLAB(R) v7.1 (Mathworks, Inc., United States), Excel(R) 2007 (Microsoft, United States), and SPSS(R) v12.0 (Apache Software Foundation, United States) were used. Twenty three frames were of 12 x 10, 5 x 60, 3 x 120, 2 x 300's duration, respectively. The modified one-compartmental model and the recirculation correction method were applied. Statistical analysis was performed by using Test of Normality, ANOVA and Post-Hoc (Scheffe's) analysis, and p-value less than 0.05 was considered as significant. RESULTS: The normal reference ranges of MVO2 were presented as 3.18-4.64 x 10(-4) ml/g/sec, 1.91-3.94 x 10(-4) ml/g/sec, 4.31-6.40 x 10(-4) ml/g/sec, 2.84-4.53 x 10(-4) ml/g/sec and 3.42-5.00 x 10(-4) ml/g/sec in the septum, the inferior wall, the lateral wall, the anterior wall and the entire wall, respectively. In addition, it was noted that the dual exponentiality of the clearance curve is due to the recirculation effect and that the characteristic of the curve is essentially mono-exponential. CONCLUSION: 11C-Acetate is a radiotracer worthwhile to assess MVO2. Re-circulated 11C can influence TAC of 11C in myocadia and so the recirculation correction must be considered when measuring MVO2.