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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    European journal of nuclear medicine 12 (1986), S. 447-454 
    ISSN: 1619-7089
    Keywords: 89Sr therapy ; Prostatic carcinoma ; Strontium kinetics ; Metastatic bone disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Strontium kinetics were investigated in a group of 14 patients receiving 89Sr palliation for metastatic bone disease secondary to prostatic carcinoma. Using 85Sr as a tracer, total body strontium retention R(t) was monitored for a 3 month period following 89Sr administration, and at 90 days was found to vary from 11% to 88% and to correlate closely with the fraction of the skeleton showing scintigraphic evidence of osteoblastic metastatic involvement. Strontium renal plasma clearance varied from 1.6 l/day to 11.6 l/day, and in nine patients was significantly reduced compared with values found in healthy adult men, probably due to increased renal tubular reabsorption associated with the disturbance of calcium homoeostasis. Renal clearance rate was the principal factor determining R(t) for t〈6 days, and was an important secondary factor at later times. Over the interval 30 days t〈90 days, R(t) was closely fitted by the power law function R(t)=R 30 (t/30)-b, with R 30 and b showing the close correlation expected from the effect of R(t) on strontium recycling. The correction of the data for this effect to determine the true skeletal release rate is described. Measurement of localized strontium turnover in individual metastatic deposits from whole body profiles and scintigraphic images gave retention curves that typically rose to a plateau by 10 days after therapy, and then decreased very slowly. In contrast, retention curves for adjacent normal trabecular bone showed more rapid turnover, peaking at 1 day and subsequently decreasing following a t-0.2 power law function. The changes in strontium kinetics found in metastatic bone disease are favourable to the objectives of 89Sr therapy.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1619-7089
    Keywords: 89Sr therapy ; Prostatic carcinoma ; Dosimetry
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We present dosimetry for spinal metastases and red bone marrow in two patients who received 89Sr therapy for disseminated prostatic carcinoma. Absorbed dose to metastases was estimated by combining 85Sr gamma camera studies with computed tomographic measurements of bone mass, and doses of 20 cGy/MBq and 24 cGy/MBq were found for vertebral metastases that uniformly involved the bodies of L3 and D12 respectively. Absorbed dose to red bone marrow was estimated from total body strontium retention studies using the ICRP model for bone dosimetry, and a ratio of metastatic to marrow dose of around 10 was found in each patient. Although they received comparable treatment activities of around 200 MBq, the patients showed markedly different haematological response, this difference being confirmed when each received a second 89Sr treatment 6 months after the first. As a result, clinically significant thrombocytopenia occurred in one patient which prevented further radiostrontium therapy being given.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1619-7089
    Keywords: SeHCAT ; B12-inflammatory bowel disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The absorption of 75Se-23-selena-25-homotaurocholate (SeHCAT) was compared with vitamin-B12 absorption and conventional radiography in 44 patients with inflammatory bowel disease. The retention of SeHCAT was normal in 11 patients with ulcerative colitis but was abnormally low in 9 patients with terminal-ileal resection, 9 out of 14 patients with small-bowel Crohn's disease and in 2 out of 10 patients with Crohn's colitis. The 5 patients with small-bowel Crohn's disease and normal retention had either inactive disease or no radiological evidence of terminalileal involvement. Measurements of the absorption of vitamin B12 did not discriminate between these groups, and there was very poor correlation between B12 and SeHCAT absorption (r=0.506, P〈0.05). There was extremely good correlation of SeHCAT retention measured using a whole-body counter with that measured using an uncollimated gamma camera (r=0.96, P〈0.001). The results suggest that SeHCAT retention may prove complementary to conventional methods of assessing small-bowel disease in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. As measurement by gamma camera is feasible, this test can be used in most departments of nuclear medicine.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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