Lancet
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Comparative Study
Clinical experience with 99mTc-hexamethylpropylene-amineoxime for labelling leucocytes and imaging inflammation.
Hexamethylpropylene-amineoxime (HMPAO) forms a lipid-soluble neutral complex with 99mTc which is rapidly incorporated into leucocytes in vitro. In six patients with suspected or known inflammatory disease, a "mixed" leucocyte suspension isolated from 85 ml blood anticoagulated with acid-citrate-dextrose was labelled by 99mTc-HMPAO with a mean efficiency of 47% (SE2%), of which 78% (3) was taken up by granulocytes. Activity eluted more rapidly from other cell types in vitro than from granulocytes, which remained firmly labelled. ⋯ All six patients were positive for inflammatory disease, as early as 30 min in five patients and at 3 h in the sixth; they all remained positive at 20-24 h. Four patients also received 111In-labelled "pure" granulocytes. In terms of detail, the 99mTc images were comparable or superior to the 111In images.
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Fluorescein angiography was used to study retinal microvascular perfusion in 20 patients undergoing coronary artery surgery. Colour retinal photographs and fluorescein angiograms were obtained preoperatively and at 5-14 days postoperatively. ⋯ No new pathological features appeared in the retina after surgery. Intraoperative fluorescein angiography of the retina may prove valuable for investigation of cerebrovascular microembolism in the territory of the internal carotid artery during cardiopulmonary bypass in man.