Background: The primary objective of this study was to investigate the diagnostic characteristics of bone scintigraphy single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (BS-SPECT/CT) for diagnosing aseptic loosening after uncemented total knee arthroplasty (TKA), and to evaluate the following aspects: how to manage inconclusive results, the interobserver reliability, and the location of tracer uptake between symptomatic cases with and without aseptic loosening.
Methods: In this study, 180 patients who had uncemented TKA and persistent knee pain suspected of aseptic loosening were included. As part of routine medical care, BS-SPECT/CT was used, and its results were compared with the reference standard, which involved revision surgery for aseptic loosening or a 12-month follow-up without revision or imaging.
Aim: In this retrospective study, fractional flow reserve was compared to stress myocardial blood flow derived by -ammonia (-NH3) myocardial perfusion PET/CT.
Methods: From a large cohort of patients referred for -NH3 PET/CT, patients who also had fractional flow reserve-measurements within 6 months of the PET study were selected. These fractional flow reserve measurements were compared to PET/CT derived stress myocardial blood flow of the corresponding coronary territory.
A 54-year-old male patient was referred for computed tomography angiography to rule out cardiovascular disease. The examination revealed a single coronary artery originating from the right sinus of Valsalva, extending to the normal left circumflex artery and left anterior descending artery domains. The computed tomography showed only mild coronary sclerosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF