Increasing interest in bone mass has led to dedicated commercial dual photon absorptiometry (DPA) instruments. We describe a method for the measurement of the mineral content of the lumbar spine using a scintillation camera. The most appropriate source(s) and collimator were investigated. An especially constructed arm placed the sources in the focal point of a converging collimator. Two single-peak sources, 99Tcm and 241Am, were used instead of dual-peak 153Gd source. Phantom studies showed no degradation of the results in water depths of up to 26 cm. Acquiring 10 Mcounts per image over a 300 cm2 field, a coefficient of variation (c.v.) of 1.7% was obtained. Reducing the total counts per image to 1 Mcount gave rise to a c.v. of 6.2%. Long-term measurements showed a c.v. of 1.1% for density, with a mean value of 0.98 gHa cm-2 compared to 0.90 for a commercial DPA instrument. Repeated measurements of the lumbar spine on 10 patients with a 2 week interval showed a c.v. of 5%. Comparative measurements were made between the scintillation camera and a commercial DPA instrument on six volunteers. Systematic higher results, similar to those observed with the phantom, were obtained with the scintillation camera. The reproducibility on a phantom and in patients is in the same range as commercial DPA instruments. The low cost related to the use of standard nuclear medicine equipment and to inexpensive radioactive sources represent definite advantages.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00006231-198808000-00010DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

scintillation camera
16
commercial dpa
12
mineral content
8
dpa instruments
8
lumbar spine
8
dpa instrument
8
assessment vertebral
4
vertebral mineral
4
content single-crystal
4
scintillation
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!