technetium-tc-99m-lidofenin has been researched along with Abdomen--Acute* in 3 studies
1 review(s) available for technetium-tc-99m-lidofenin and Abdomen--Acute
Article | Year |
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Acute right upper quadrant abdominal pain: radionuclide approach.
Topics: Abdomen, Acute; Acute Disease; Cholecystitis; Female; Humans; Imino Acids; Male; Middle Aged; Organotechnetium Compounds; Radionuclide Imaging; Technetium; Technetium Tc 99m Disofenin; Technetium Tc 99m Lidofenin; Ultrasonography | 1983 |
2 other study(ies) available for technetium-tc-99m-lidofenin and Abdomen--Acute
Article | Year |
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Diagnosis of acute cholecystitis using hepatobiliary scan with technetium-99m PIPIDA.
Sixty patients were evaluated for acute abdominal pain using technetium-99m PIPIDA hepatobiliary imaging. The sensitivity of the test was 90.6 percent in all patients and the accuracy was 93.3 percent. In the evaluation of acutely ill patients with right upper quadrant pain, fever, nausea and vomiting, hepatobiliary imaging with PIPIDA is the preferred test for diagnosing acute cholecystitis. If the test is positive, disease of the gallbladder and probably acute cholecystitis are present. Early operation can proceed if desirable. If the test is negative and the bilirubin level is less than 5.0 mg/dl, acute cholecystitis is not present. In such cases conservative treatment is appropriate, and follow-up tests should be performed to evaluate the possibility of chronic cholecystitis. When the bilirubin level exceeds 5.0 mg/dl, the test is often indeterminate. Topics: Abdomen, Acute; Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Bile Ducts; Cholecystitis; Female; Humans; Imino Acids; Liver; Male; Middle Aged; Organotechnetium Compounds; Radionuclide Imaging; Technetium; Technetium Tc 99m Lidofenin | 1981 |
HIDA scanning in gall-bladder disease.
HIDA labelled with 99Tcm is a new hepatobiliary imaging radiopharmaceutical which is selectively taken up by the liver and excreted into the biliary tree; it has been shown to demonstrate the gall bladder in normal subjects. Using a gamma-camera computer system, dynamic liver scans were performed during the first hour on 97 patients who, on the basis of standard investigations and on the findings at surgery, were divided into six groups as follows. 1. Normal. 2. Hepatocellular disease. 3. Biliary obstruction. 4. Chronic gall-bladder disease. 5. Acute gall-bladder disease. 6. Acute abdomen (not due to gall-bladder disease). Pictures were taken and activity-time curves of "regions of interest" were generated from the computer data. From these the presence or absence of a gall-bladder image was easily determined. The gall bladder was visualized in all normals but in none of the patients with acute gall-bladder disease. In the group with an acute abdomen suggestive of acute gall-bladder disease, but subsequently shown to be otherwise, the gall bladder was visualized in all cases. The gall bladder was not visualized in 42% of hepatocellular disease patients, nor in any of those with biliary obstruction, due to poor uptake or poor secretion of the HIDA. In cases of chronic gall-bladder disease, visualization of the gall bladder corresponded with gall-bladder opacification on the oral cholecystogram; in these cases the HIDA scan offers no advantage over the oral cholecystogram. These results suggest that in cases of "acute abdomen" an absent gall bladder image with a normal hepatogram will strongly support the diagnosis of acute gall-bladder disease, and that visualization of the gall bladder excludes such a diagnosis, making the HIDA scan a useful first-line investigation in these patients. Topics: Abdomen, Acute; Cholestasis; Gallbladder; Gallbladder Diseases; Humans; Imino Acids; Liver Diseases; Radionuclide Imaging; Technetium; Technetium Tc 99m Lidofenin; Time Factors | 1980 |