Quantitative bone SPECT analysis of mandibular condyles in an asymptomatic population: an approach to normal reference values
2020
Abstract Bone scintigraphy is an extremely valuable technique in diagnosis and treatment planning for patients with condylar hyperplasia (CH). The main objective of this study was to develop an approach to determine normal activity values in the mandibular condyles, adjusted to age and sex, through quantitative analysis of bone single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) on a condyle-by-condyle basis and to compare these values with those of a control group comprising patients with confirmed CH. Technetium 99 m-methylene diphosphonate (99mTc-MDP) SPECT studies of the mandibular condyles were performed in patients with no mandibular pathology for quantitative analysis. Regions of interest were drawn on slices representing the upper, middle, and inferior thirds of each condyle and on the summation of transaxial slices representing the whole condyle (three-dimensional approach). The clivus was used for internal validation and the condyle to clivus ratios were calculated. These ratios were compared between ‘normal’ and ‘diseased’ condyles. A total 144 condyles in normal patients and 25 in confirmed CH patients were analysed. Differences between the ratios were evaluated through the coefficient of variation. In normal patients, the ratios to the clivus on the summed condyle image showed the lowest variability: range 0.3–1.28 (median 0.74). The quantile regression model showed significant differences with respect to sex, but not to age. The Mann–Whitney test showed significant differences in the ratios to clivus between normal and diseased condyles (P
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