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NUCLEAR MEDICINE IN DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF Thyroid DISEASES

NUCLEAR MEDICINE IN DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF Thyroid DISEASES. M.Moslehi Nuclear physician. Diagnostic Aim. Imaging Methods. Advantages of Thyroid Scintigram over other Imaging Techniques. Allowing correlation of physical exam and anatomical imaging findings with physiology.

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NUCLEAR MEDICINE IN DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF Thyroid DISEASES

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  1. NUCLEAR MEDICINEINDIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF Thyroid DISEASES M.Moslehi Nuclear physician

  2. Diagnostic Aim

  3. Imaging Methods

  4. Advantages of Thyroid Scintigram over other Imaging Techniques • Allowing correlation of physical exam and anatomical imaging findings with physiology.

  5. PATIENT PREPARATION Need to cease anti thyroid drugs or thyroxine replacement prior to scanning - ( in consultation with the referring doctor).

  6. Scanning Techniques & Devices

  7. Scanning Techniques & Devices

  8. Scanning Techniques & Devices

  9. The thyroid

  10. RADIONUCLIDE GENERATORSallow to separate chemically short-lived radioactive daughter nuclei with good characteristics for medical imaging from long-lived radioactive parent nuclei. Milking cow analogy

  11. Comparison of lifespan death risk from nuclear medicine procedures with the lifespan death risk of smoking, driving in a highway and natural irradiation

  12. Nuclear medicine and pregnant patients… • Most diagnostic procedures are done with short-lived radionuclides (such as technetium-99m) that do not cause large fetal doses • Often, fetal dose can be reduced through maternal hydration and encouraging voiding of urine • Some radionuclides do cross the placenta and can pose fetal risks (such as iodine-131) INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION ON RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION ——————————————————————————————————————

  13. Nuclear medicine and pregnant patient (cont’d) • The fetal thyroid accumulates iodine after about 10 weeks gestational age • High fetal thyroid doses from radioiodine can result in permanent hypothyroidism • If pregnancy is discovered within 12 h of radio-iodine administration, prompt oral administration of stable potassium iodine (60-130 mg) to the mother can reduce fetal thyroid dose. This may need to be repeated several times INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION ON RADIOLOGICAL PROTECTION ——————————————————————————————————————

  14. Recommendations for cessation of breast feeding

  15. Which one? • I-131: is not the agent of choice for routine diagnostic scintigraphies (because of high energy emissions and the long half life). • Technetium-99m: A frequently used alternative.

  16. Physical Characteristics of Tc-99m • Half life: 6 hr • Generator produced • Usual dose: 3-10 millicurie

  17. Tc-99m Thyroid Scintigraphy: Applications • Further evaluation of findings on physical examination. • To determine the functional status of thyroid nodules. • Detection of extrathyroidal tissue (such as lingual thyroid). • Differential diagnosis of hyperthyroidism.

  18. Normal Thyroid Scintigram

  19. Normal Thyroid Scintigram

  20. Thyroid Nodule • The major challenge is to determine whether a thyroid nodule is benign or malignant

  21. Most important tools in the assessment of thyroid nodules • History and clinical exam • Thyroid Function Tests • Fine Needle Aspiration (FNA) • Thyroid Scan

  22. Scintigraphy in Evaluation of Thyroid Nodules • Can not be used to exclude or confirm the malignancy. • FNA with Scintigraphy is a more direct means

  23. Scintigraphic classification of thyroid nodules • Cold (Hypofunctioning) • Hot (Functioning) • Indeterminate: Function equals to that of surrounding normal thyroid

  24. A Functional Thyroid Nodule

  25. A Functional Thyroid Nodule

  26. Thyroid Nodules (continue) • Nonfunctioning nodules appear cold and require further evaluation by FNA. • Autonomously functioning nodules may appear hot . Only a few patients with autonomous nodules have been found to have thyroid cancer , and only a few of these cancers were aggressive . Furthermore, in some of these patients, the cancer was adjacent to the autonomous nodule rather than within it.

  27. Multinodular Goiter

  28. Multinodular Goiter

  29. Cold Nodule

  30. Cold Nodule

  31. Differential Diagnosis of thyrotoxicosis • Grave’s Disease • Toxic Multinodular goiter • Toxic Adenoma • Thyroiditis • Thyrotoxicosis Factitia

  32. Grave’s Disease

  33. Grave’s Disease

  34. Thyroiditis Clinical Picture (can be confusing) Plasma Levels of Thyroid Hormones (may be misdiagnosed as Grave’s Dis.) Scan Pattern RAIU

  35. Ectopic Thyroid Tissue • lingual, substernal, pelvic/ovarian teratoma (struma ovarii) • Pertechnetate is not useful for imaging the substernal area due to attenuation or superimposed blood pool activity

  36. Thyroglossal duct cyst • Midline along the migratory path of the embryologic gland, anywhere from the foramen cecum at the base of the tongue to the lower neck • The vast majority of patients have normal thyroid scans. • Complications: Infection, and rarely papillary thyroid carcinoma

  37. Physical Characteristics of I-131 • Half-life of 8.05 days • Emits a high energy gamma (364 keV) and particulate emissions • Reactor produced

  38. Dose of I-131 • Diagnostic • Retrostenal Goiter: 50-200 Microcurie • whole body scans for following of thyroid carcinoma: 2-5 mCi • Therapeutic • Non-neoplastic applications: 5-29 mCi • Differentiated thyroid CA: 100-200 mCi

  39. I-131 Thyroid Scintigraphy: Applications • Evaluation of a substernal mass • Detection of persistent residual tissue after thyroid surgery for DTC • Detection of regional cervical lymph node involvement or distant metastatic involvement

  40. Substernal Thyroid Masses • I-131 is the preferred imaging agent due to mediastinal blood pool activity with Tc-99m and significant attenuation of low energy gamma photons by sternum • Most intra-thoracic goiters demonstrate anatomic continuity, but not necessarily functional continuity with cervical thyroid tissue.

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