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Title: Myocardial uptake of labeled oleic and linoleic acids. Author: Beierwaltes WH, Ice RD, Shaw MJ, Ryo UY. Journal: J Nucl Med; 1975 Sep; 16(9):842-5. PubMed ID: 1159515. Abstract: Oleic acid labeled with 14C, (14C-OA) or 131I (131I-OA) and 131I-labeled linoleic acid (131I-LOA) were administered intravenously to rats and tissue distribution studies completed at various time intervals from 5 to 60 min. Tissue distribution of 131-I-labeled oleic acid or linoleic acid was also studied in dogs at 5- and 30-min time intervals after intravenous administration of the tracer dose. There were distinct differences in the patterns of tissue distribution between 14C-OA, 131I-OA, and 131I-LOA. Radioactivity concentration in the myocardium was the highest at all time intervals in the rats given 131I-OA only. In dogs, the myocardial uptake of 131I-OA was significantly higher than the radioactivity in the blood or other tissues at 30 min after injection. The disappearance rates of 131I-OA and 131I-LOA were almost identical but myocardial concentration of 131I-LOA at 30 min after the dose in the dog was half that of 131I-OA whereas 131I-LOA liver concentration was higher than that of 131I-OA. Since the concentrations of our formulated 131I-OA in the blood and in the myocardium are both highest at the earlier intervals, it should be difficult to detect myocardial ischemia or infarction with 131I-OA scanning.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]