J Korean Neurosurg Soc.  1994 May;23(5):548-552.

Technetium-99m-MIBI SPECT in Intracranial Lesions

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Neurosurgery, Catholic University Medical College, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

Thallium(T1) has recently been used as a pharmaceutical for tumor imaging and staging. The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical significance of the T1 analogue, 99m-Tc-MIBI(methoxyisobutylisonitrile), for imaging of intracranial lesions. The advantages of MIBI were though to be a lower radiation exposure and better image quality than with T1. 99m-Tc-MIBI SPECT studies were done in 30 patients with brain tumors(14 astrocytomas, 7 meningiomas, 2 hemangioblastomas, 2 craniopharyngiomas, 1 ependymoma, 4 metastatic tumors) and in twelve patients with non-tumorous lesions(2 abscesses, 2 granulomas, 2 cysticercosis, 3 old intracerebral hemorrages, 1 infarction. 1 postoperative gliosis, 1 unknown pathology), and semiquantitative assessment of tracer uptake was made using a ratio of radioactivity for lesion to contralateral normal brain(Lesion/Contralateral normal brains ; L/C). Twenty six of thirty tumors showed high L/C ratios(>1.5) and another four tumors low L/C ratios(<1.5). Of 12 non-tumorous intracranial lesions, 11 showed little or no uptake, but one moderate uptake. In conclusion, it appears that brain tumors show more intense focal uptake than non-tumorous brain lesions. However, further studies would be warranted to evaluate the clinical significance of MIBI SPECT in tumor staging(grading) and in differentiating necrosis from tumor regrowth more clearly.

Keyword

Thallium; 99m Tc-MIBI SPECT; Brain tumor

MeSH Terms

Abscess
Astrocytoma
Brain
Brain Neoplasms
Craniopharyngioma
Cysticercosis
Ependymoma
Gliosis
Granuloma
Hemangioblastoma
Humans
Infarction
Meningioma
Necrosis
Radioactivity
Thallium
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon*
Thallium
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