Nuclear medicine communications
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Comparative Study
Objective and subjective comparison of standard 2-D and fully 3-D reconstructed data on a PET/CT system.
The relative advantage of fully 3-D versus 2-D mode for whole-body imaging is currently the focus of considerable expert debate. The nature of 3-D PET acquisition for FDG PET/CT theoretically allows a shorter scan time and improved efficiency of FDG use than in the standard 2-D acquisition. We therefore objectively and subjectively compared standard 2-D and fully 3-D reconstructed data for FDG PET/CT on a research PET/CT system. ⋯ A possible major advantage of 3-D data acquisition is the faster patient throughput with a 50% reduction in scan time. The fully 3-D reconstruction technique has overcome the technical drawbacks of current 3-D imaging technique. In our limited number of patients there was no significant diagnostic difference between 2-D and fully 3-D.
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Comparative Study
Retro-orbital injection is an effective route for radiopharmaceutical administration in mice during small-animal PET studies.
Small-animal PET is acquiring importance for pre-clinical studies. In rodents, radiotracers are usually administrated via the tail vein. This procedure can be very difficult and time-consuming as soft tissue extravasations are very frequent and tail scars can prevent repeated injections after initial failure. The aim of our study was to compare the retro-orbital (RO) versus tail vein intravenous (i.v.) administration of (18)F-FDG and (11)C-choline in mice for small-animal PET studies. ⋯ The RO administration in mice represents a technical advantage over intravenous administration in being an easier and faster procedure. However, its use requires high specific activity while its value in peptides and other receptor-specific radiopharmaceuticals needs further assessment.