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Cases of the month
Bone scan/Gallium-67 imaging for spinal infection | Bone scan/Gallium-67 imaging for spinal infection |
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A 78-yr old woman with back pain was referred for a Gallium scan...
Dr. Thai Pham
Centres Hospitaliers de Jolimont-Lobbes/Nivelles-Tubize Site de Nivelles
HISTORY: She has a history of neurosurgery 4 years ago (laminectomyL1 - body ablation D12-L1 - complex arthodesis D10-L2) for a rare paraganglioma tumor. CLINICAL: Since 2 months she complaints about intense back pain at dorso-lumbar junction. She developped hyperthermia and a blood culture came out positive (gram- enterobacter aerogenes MR).
ICONOGRAPHY:
Figure 1. The plain X-rays of chest, abdomen and dorso-lumbar junction demonstrated no abnormality. The CT and NMR scan were non-diagnostic with suboptimal quality due to the arthodesis materials.
Figure 2. We did perform the GALLIUM SCAN following a SIMULTANEOUS DUAL ISOTOPE PROTOCOL GALLIUM-BONE SCAN (Gallium67-HDPTc99m) on 1-Day. The dual Ga-Tc planarWB scan demonstrated a focus of enhanced uptake of Gallium at the inferior dorsal segment and post-neurosurgery bone remodeling HDP-uptake at the dorso-lumbar junction.
Figure 3-4. The dual Ga-Tc SPECT confirmed and revealed a paravertebral focus of Gallium-uptake at D8-D11 level and another central spinal focus at D9-D10 (Fig 4) but no enhanced bone-uptake at these levels.
CONCLUSION: Paravertebral abcess at D8-D11 levels with spinal/discal extension. TAKE HOME MESSAGE: Gallium is preferred to radiolabelled leucocytes for spinal infectious pathology. In the era of SPECT-CT, alternative does exist when you don't have (yet) a CT or when CT would probably not help due to metallic artifacts. SIMULTANEOUS DUAL ISOTOPE SCAN is a smart, safe, and helpful technique and can done in 1-Day. References:
Comment from the Editor (Prof. S. Goldman, ULB). We would like to remind that it is unusual to image Gallium-67 as early as 6 hours after injection. Yet this approach is mentionned in the SNM guidelines. "Scintigrams are generally obtained 24–72 h after injection of the radiopharmaceutical. Delayed scintigrams at 96 h or later may be necessary for accurate interpretation and are particularly helpful in the abdomen when normal colonic and renal activity can make scintigram interpretation difficult. Early 3–4-h scintigrams can be helpful in cases of acute inflammation to avoid extensive bowel activity." Here is the link to the SNM guidelines .
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