Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) relative to computed tomography (CT) for detecting metastatic cervical lymph nodes in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (HNSCC), and to ascertain the factors that affect this accuracy.
Methods: A total of 1076 lymph nodes obtained from 35 neck dissections in 26 HNSCC patients who preoperatively underwent both FDG-PET and CT were retrospectively analyzed. For pathological metastatic lymph nodes, the lymph node size (short-axis diameter), the ratio of intranodal tumor deposits, and the size of intranodal tumor deposits (maximum diameter of metastatic foci in each lymph node) were histologically recorded.
Background: A simple method to detect silent aspiration during sleep has not been established in postsurgical oral cancer patients.
Methods: Radioactive paste consisting of (99m)TcO(4) (-) and carboxylmethylcellulose was prepared and placed in a maxillary prosthesis with a cavity in the palatal space. The patient was requested to wear this appliance during sleep, and the following morning the patient was subjected to scintigraphic scanning.