Radionuclide imaging in the assessment of lung injury

1980 
Nuclear medicine imaging techniques are being more widely applied to study a variety of lung injuries. Ventilation and perfusion imaging is often superior to other roentgenographic techniques for establishing the diagnosis and demonstrating the extent of such injuries. At several large burn centers, the Xe-133 washout technique has become the cornerstone for diagnosing early inhalation injury. The overall accuracy of this procedure is 92%. Regional decreases in ventilation and perfusion can reliably localize aspirated radiolucent foreign bodies. Disproportionate perfusion changes are often the earliest indicator of radiation pneumonitis and other forms of vascular injury. Other types of injury, such as gastropulmonary aspiration, blunt trauma, and neardrowning, require further evaluation before the ultimate role of nuclear imaging is defined. An imaging technique to assess capillary permeability in the adult respiratory distress syndrome would be of great clinical benefit.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    24
    References
    16
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []