Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine
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The concept of the ischemic penumbra was formulated on the basis of animal experiments showing functional impairment and electrophysiologic disturbances with decreasing flow to the brain below defined values (the threshold for function) and irreversible tissue damage with blood supply further decreased (the threshold for infarction). The perfusion range between these thresholds was termed the "penumbra," and restitution of flow above the functional threshold was able to reverse the deficits without permanent damage. In further experiments, the dependency of the development of irreversible lesions on the interaction of the severity and the duration of critically reduced blood flow was established, proving that the lower the flow, the shorter the time for efficient reperfusion. ⋯ Some of these discrepancies can be explained by the nonselective application of relative perfusion thresholds, which might be improved by more complex analytic procedures. The heterogeneity of the MRI signatures used for the definition of the mismatch are also responsible for disappointing results in the application of perfusion-weighted or diffusion-weighted MRI to the selection of patients for clinical trials. As long as validation of the mismatch selection paradigm is lacking, the use of this paradigm as a surrogate marker of outcome is limited.
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Comparative Study
Correlation Between SUVmax and CT Radiomic Analysis Using Lymph Node Density in PET/CT-Based Lymph Node Staging.
In patients with lung cancer (LC), malignant melanoma (MM), gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors (GEP NETs), and prostate cancer (PCA), lymph node (LN) staging is often performed by 18F-FDG PET/CT (LC and MM), 68Ga-DOTATOC PET/CT (GEP NET), and 68Ga-labeled prostate-specific membrane antigen PET/CT (PCA) but is sometimes not accurate because of indeterminate PET findings. To better evaluate malignant LN infiltration, additional surrogate parameters, especially in cases with indeterminate PET findings, would be helpful. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether SUVmax in the PET examination might correlate with semiautomated density measurements of LNs in the CT component of the PET/CT examination.
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Women who have breast cancer and are younger than 40 y have a poorer outcome than older women. A higher rate of undetected metastases at the time of diagnosis in younger women has been proposed to account for this difference. Our main objective was to test this hypothesis by comparing the distant metastasis rate (DMR) on initial 18F-FDG PET/CT in a group of breast cancer patients younger than 40 y (<40 y group) with that in a group of breast cancer patients older than 40 y (≥40 y group). An assessment of associations between distant metastases and tumor characteristics was a second objective of the present study.