Background: The aim of this study was to assess the long-term anti-inflammatory effect and safety of 90-Yttrium and 166-Holmium radiosynoviorthesis (RSO) for treating chronic knee synovitis of various origins.
Methods: A total of 820 patients were included in this study and were followed up to 10 years after the procedure for objective and subjective changes in signs and symptoms of inflammation.
Results: Five years after RSO, excellent and good results were seen in 71% (95% CI 67-74%) of patients.
Purpose: This retrospective study analyzed the long-term effects of radiosynoviorthesis (RSO) with special emphasis to local joint pain in patients from 4 different RSO centers in Germany and Austria.
Methods: A total of 168 finger joints in 147 patients with digital joint OA were investigated. The indication for RSO was based on both clinical complaints and a proven synovitis, despite anti-inflammatory pharmacotherapy and previous intra-articular corticosteroid injections.
Background: Radiosynoviorthesis (RSO) is a nuclear medical local treatment modality for inflammatory joint diseases. It is indicated in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in joints with persistent synovitis despite adequate pharmacotherapy. Arthritis of the elbow joint occurs in up to 2/3 of patients with RA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo assess patient perspective and professional practice of intraarticular therapies (IATs) across Europe, an expert international multidisciplinary panel designed two open web-based surveys: one targeting people who had experienced at least two IATs (44 items); and one targeting health care providers (HCPs) (160 items). Surveys were disseminated via patient and professional associations and social media. A descriptive analysis was performed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe existence of a popliteal Baker's cyst was regarded as a contraindication for radiosynoviorthesis of the knee joint since decades. A so-called "ventile mechanism" was discussed leading to a significant concentration of the intraarticularly applied, high energy beta emitting radiopharmaceutical yttrium-90-colloid in the cyst. This cyst arises from a bursa beneath the tendon of the medial head of the gastrocnemius muscle, normally communicating with the knee joint space.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: To establish evidence-based recommendations to guide health professionals using intra-articular therapies (IAT) in adult patients with peripheral arthropathies.
Methods: A multidisciplinary international task force established the objectives, users and scope and the need for background information, including systematic literature reviews) and two surveys addressed to healthcare providers and patients throughout Europe. The evidence was discussed in a face-to-face meeting, recommendations were formulated and subsequently voted for anonymously in a three-round Delphi process to obtain the final agreement.
Background: Radiosynoviorthesis (RSO) is a local radionuclide therapy of inflammatory joint diseases, successfully performed since several decades mainly as an outpatient-protocol in ambulatory health care centers or nuclear medicine practices. Despite of long-term experience in some centers, only very few valuable or comparable data about the procedure itself and/or the clinical results of this treatment are available.
Objectives: The aim of this online survey is to assess reliable data of the current status in Germany.
Objectives: Radiosynoviorthesis (RSO) is used for the treatment of inflammatory joint diseases. However, there are no long-term results published comparing it to conservative therapy. Therefore, the aim of this prospective observational study was to evaluate response rates after radionuclide therapy in patients suffering from knee osteoarthritis over a time period of 10 years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPostoperative pain is a clinically relevant issue in orthopedic patients, affecting more than 40% 1 year after foot and ankle surgery. Because of the very complex anatomy with many different joints and several motion axes, clinical examination and conventional imaging are sometimes not sufficient to identify a local pain generator. Local uptake of bone-seeking radiopharmaceuticals is known to correlate accurately with sites of pain generating foci and, thus, bone scintigraphy has been an established method to evaluate these respective patients for many years.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis review summarizes the role of SPECT/CT in patients with a painful postoperative knee and describes typical diagnostic criteria in these patients. Pain after knee surgery is common and is influenced by the underlying pathology, the type of surgery, and the patient. Knee joint-preserving surgery includes osteotomy, ligament reconstruction, meniscus surgery, and cartilage repair procedures, often used in combination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConsecutive milestones in hip arthroplasty design and surgical technique have contributed to the successful and cost-effective intervention this procedure has become today in maintaining mobility and quality of life in patients with osteoarthritis, fracture, or other hip conditions. With the increasing prevalence of hip joint replacements, the need for improved diagnostic imaging tools to guide revision surgery has risen in parallel. Over the last few years, promising data have emerged on the potential role of bone SPECT/CT imaging in the assessment of patients with recurrent pain after arthroplasty.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBack pain is a common problem and the diagnosis and treatment depend on the clinical presentation, yet overlap between pain syndromes is common. Imaging of patients with chronic back pain in both pre- and postoperative scenarios include radiological, radionuclide, and hybrid techniques. In general, these techniques have their own advantages and limitations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this review we summarize the current evidence and experience regarding the performance of SPECT/CT in the evaluation of patients with postoperative painful wrist or hand. There is a wide range of operative wrist and hand interventions due to congenital, traumatic, degenerative, or inflammatory diseases. A significant number of patients suffer from pain after operative procedures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe skeleton is a potential metastatic target of many malignant tumors. Up to 85% of prostate and breast cancer patients may develop bone metastases causing severe pain syndromes in many of them. In patients suffering from multilocular, mainly osteoblastic lesions and pain syndrome, radionuclide therapy is recommended for pain palliation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Today, acute cardiac rejection is detected by endomyocardial biopsy, which harbours many risks. Thus, there is a necessity for less invasive methods. Since interleukin-2 (IL2) is over-expressed in acute graft rejection, we use radioactive DNA-fragments complementary to the mRNA of IL2 to detect graft rejection scintigraphically.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA virtually planar water tetramer in which the water molecules are virtually tetrahedrally coordinated could be realized in the solid in a three-dimensional network of [Tc4(CO)12-(mu3-OH)4.4H2O]. The network could be produced by cocrystallization of the new cubane-like cluster [Tc(CO)3-(mu3-OH)]4 and water as a complementary component.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging
May 2005
Purpose: Radiation synovectomy was developed for local treatment of rheumatoid arthritis. In this study, the long-term efficacy of radiation synovectomy was retrospectively evaluated in patients with osteoarthritis (activated arthrosis) of the digital joints using an algofunctional score.
Methods: Fifty-three digital joints in 29 patients (mean age 64.
Unlabelled: Transplantation of progenitor cells (PCs) has been shown to improve neovascularization and left ventricular function after myocardial ischemia. The fate of transplanted PCs has been monitored by fluorescence labeling or by genetic modifications introducing reporter genes. However, these techniques are limited by the need to kill the experimental animal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study is to investigate the myeloprotective effects of different amifostine regimens in rabbits undergoing high-dose treatment with 186Rhenium-(tin)1,1-hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate (186Re-HEDP) and to analyze the impact of amifostine on the bone uptake of the radiopharmaceutical. All animals were treated with 1000 MBq 186Re-HEDP. Group ReA received 500 mg amifostine prior to radionuclide therapy, group ReA3 received 3 x 200 mg amifostine 24 hours and 30 minutes prior to and 24 hours after radionuclide therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: This preliminary treatment trial was performed to evaluate the safety and clinical efficacy of intracavitary therapy with (186)Re-colloid in patients with recurrent otitis media and paranasal sinusitis, resistant to pharmacotherapy and surgical treatment.
Methods: Thirty-nine applications of 5-35 MBq (186)Re-colloid into the tympanon and the paranasal sinuses were performed in 6 patients. Biodistribution and biokinetics were studied by gamma-camera imaging.
Unlabelled: The aim of this animal study was to measure the bone uptake of (99m)Tc-hydroxymethylene diphosphonate (HDP) before and after high-dose treatment with (153)Sm-ethylenediaminetetramethylenephosphonate (EDTMP) or (186)Re-(tin)1,1-hydroxyethylidene diphosphonate (HEDP) to prove or disprove post-therapeutic alterations of bone uptake of radiolabeled bisphosphonates.
Methods: Quantitative bone scanning using 100 MBq (99m)Tc-HDP was performed on 12 rabbits before and 8 wk after radionuclide therapy with 1,000 MBq of either (153)Sm-EDTMP or (186)Re-HEDP. Whole-body images were acquired at 3 min, 3 h, and 24 h after injection, and the activities for the whole body, urinary bladder, and soft tissue were measured by region-of-interest technique.