Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine
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The aim of the study was to use dual-isotope lymphoscintigraphy in healthy volunteers and women with breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) to detect and quantify transport of radiolabeled protein from a subcutaneous injection depot to local blood vessels as a potential mechanism of protection against edema resulting from treatment to the axilla. ⋯ Whereas (111)In-HIgG and (99m)Tc-HigG are interchangeable for measurement of depot clearance and contralateral venous accumulation rates, ipsilateral sampling is much more sensitive to protein-free radionuclide and detects significant differences resulting from some instability of (111)In-HIgG. On the basis of (99m)Tc data, there appears to be substantial local vascular access of radioprotein within the arm, both in healthy subjects and in patients with BCRL, through either lymphaticovenous communications or direct transendothelial transport.
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During the acute phase after traumatic brain injury (TBI), the metabolic state is regionally heterogeneous. The purpose of this study was to characterize contusional, pericontusional, and remote regions of TBI by estimating glucose transporter and hexokinase activities on the basis of (18)F-FDG kinetic modeling. ⋯ Brain tissue (18)F-FDG kinetics in TBI patients were consistent with reduced hexokinase activity in the whole brain (including apparently uninjured cortex), whereas glucose transport was impaired only in the area immediately around the contusion. Pericontusional high levels of (18)F-FDG uptake observed in a subgroup of patients could have been the result of regionally increased hexokinase activity.