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Title: Preoperative imaging of abnormal parathyroid glands in patients with hyperparathyroid disease using combination Tc-99m-pertechnetate and Tc-99m-sestamibi radionuclide scans. Author: Wei JP, Burke GJ, Mansberger AR. Journal: Ann Surg; 1994 May; 219(5):568-72; discussion 572-3. PubMed ID: 8185405. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of combined Tc-99m-pertechnetate and Tc-99m-sestamibi radionuclide scanning for imaging abnormal parathyroid glands in hyperparathyroid disease in a prospective study. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Established methods to localize abnormal parathyroid glands lack accuracy for routine use. Tc-99m-sestamibi used in conjunction with iodine-123 has excellent potential for preoperative imaging in patients with hyperparathyroid disease. An alternative method for parathyroid imaging was studied using Tc-99m-pertechnetate and Tc-99m-sestamibi. METHODS: Thirty patients with hyperparathyroid disease had Tc-99m-pertechnetate and Tc-99m-sestamibi subtraction radionuclide scanning to visualize abnormal parathyroid glands before surgery. The patients had surgery and pathologic confirmation of all parathyroid glands. RESULTS: In 23 patients with primary hyperparathyroidism, 12 of 13 solitary adenomas were visualized. Six of nine patients with diffuse hyperplasia had bilateral uptake consistent with diffuse hyperplasia. Three of nine patients had negative scans. One patient previously operated on for diffuse hyperplasia had only one gland scanned. Seven patients with renal failure-associated hyperparathyroid disease were scanned: five had bilateral uptake of Tc-99m-sestamibi consistent with hyperplasia, and two who had been previously operated on had localization of remaining abnormal parathyroid glands. CONCLUSIONS: Tc-99m-pertechnetate combined with Tc-99m-sestamibi subtraction radionuclide scanning is less cumbersome to implement than iodine-123 combined with Tc-99m-sestamibi scanning. It has a high sensitivity for imaging solitary parathyroid adenomas or persistent solitary hyperplastic glands. However it does not have the resolution necessary to delineate all parathyroid glands in diffuse hyperplasia.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]