Differentiation of prolonged colonic transit using scintigraphy with indium-111-labeled polystyrene pellets.

Autor: Eising EG; Clinic for Internal Medicine/Department of Gastroenterology, University of Essen, Germany., von der Ohe MR
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine [J Nucl Med] 1998 Jun; Vol. 39 (6), pp. 1062-6.
Abstrakt: Unlabelled: Prolonged colonic transit can be caused either by slow transit constipation or by pelvic outlet obstruction needing different therapeutic regimes. The aim of this study was to prove the value of scintigraphic assessment.
Methods: Colon scintigraphy was performed in 32 patients (28 women, 4 men; age range 8-68 yr) with idiopathic constipation at 8, 24 and 48 hr in ventral and dorsal projection after oral administration of a pH-sensitive, methacrylate-coated capsule of nonresorbable 111In-labeled polystyrene (cathion exchanger) micropellets (3.5 MBq/capsule). The geometric center (GC) as the sum of products of colon segment activity and colon segment number (1 = colon ascendens; 2 = transverse colon; 3 = colon descendens; 4 = rectosigmoid colon; and 5 = stool) dividing by the total counts was used to determine the velocity of colonic transit at least at 24 hr as the proximal colonic emptying (PCE) rates. Stool activity was evaluated indirectly as decay-corrected colon activity loss between two examinations. Results were compared with data obtained from 22 healthy subjects.
Results: Twenty-six patients had a significant prolongation of colonic transit after 24 and 48 hr (the 95% confidence interval of the patient's GC showed no overlap to the 95% confidence interval of GC calculated from 22 healthy controls as normal range) revealing slow transit constipation. Six patients had normal or accelerated transit (GCs and PCE rates) up to the rectum but delayed rectal emptying indicating pelvic outlet obstruction.
Conclusion: By the help of this method it was possible to differentiate the two subtypes of colon transit prolongation by use of the reported scintigraphic technique, which leads to different therapeutic management of the patients. Compared with x-ray methods (Hinton test), this method has the capability of a continuous observation of colonic transit without increasing radiation exposure.
Databáze: MEDLINE