Radioiodine uptake in inactive pulmonary tuberculosis
Autor: | Siema M. Bakheet, M Bazarbashi, Muhammad M. Hammami, John Powe, H Al Suhaibani |
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Rok vydání: | 1999 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Pathology medicine.medical_specialty Lung Neoplasms Tuberculosis Aspergillosis Diagnosis Differential Iodine Radioisotopes medicine Humans False Positive Reactions Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Thyroid Neoplasms Radionuclide Imaging Lung Tuberculosis Pulmonary Thyroid cancer Bronchiectasis business.industry Respiratory disease Thyroid General Medicine Middle Aged medicine.disease medicine.anatomical_structure Bronchitis Female business |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging. 26:659-662 |
ISSN: | 1619-7089 1619-7070 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s002590050435 |
Popis: | Radioiodine may accumulate at sites of inflammation or infection. We have seen such accumulation in six thyroid cancer patients with a history of previously treated pulmonary tuberculosis. We also review the causes of false-positive radioiodine uptake in lung infection/inflammation. Eight foci of radioiodine uptake were seen on six iodine-123 diagnostic scans. In three foci, the uptake was focal and indistinguishable from thyroid cancer pulmonary metastases from thyroid cancer. In the remaining foci, the uptake appeared nonsegmental, linear or lobar, suggesting a false-positive finding. The uptake was unchanged, variable in appearance or non-persistent on follow-up scans and less extensive than the fibrocystic changes seen on chest radiographs. In the two patients studied, thyroid hormone level did not affect the radioiodine lung uptake and there was congruent gallium-67 uptake. None of the patients had any evidence of thyroid cancer recurrence or of reactivation of tuberculosis and only two patients had chronic intermittent chest symptoms. Severe bronchiectasis, active tuberculosis, acute bronchitis, respiratory bronchiolitis, rheumatoid arthritis-associated lung disease and fungal infection such as Allescheria boydii and aspergillosis can lead to different patterns of radioiodine chest uptake mimicking pulmonary metastases. Pulmonary scarring secondary to tuberculosis may predispose to localized radioiodine accumulation even in the absence of clinically evident active infection. False-positive radioiodine uptake due to pulmonary infection/inflammation should be considered in thyroid cancer patients prior to the diagnosis of pulmonary metastases. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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