Continuous carotid infusion of short-lived krypton-81m (t1/2 13 sec) yields an assessment of regional cerebral perfusion. This assessment can be obtained in three dimensions if activity is recorded with a rotating gamma camera and a computer to reconstruct krypton-81m distribution in tomographic sections. These showed several advantages over conventional views: (a) visualization of blood-flow distribution within brain structures (gray and white matter, basal ganglia); (b) more accurate location and evaluation of areas of relatively reduced or increased perfusion; (c) better definition of patterns of collateral circulation; (d) greater sensitivity and specificity in detecting and defining blood-flow changes during physiological activation studies. A limitation of the krypton-81m technique is its invasiveness. However, this study shows that the combination of new advances in radiochemistry with single-photon emission computed tomography may result in accessible methods for assessing, noninvasively and in three dimensions, the behavior of cerebral function in man

Fazio, F., Fieschi, C., Collice, M., Nardini, M., Banfi, F., Possa, M., et al. (1980). Tomographic assessment of cerebral perfusion using a single-photon emitter (krypton-81m) and a rotating gamma camera. THE JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 21(12), 1139-1145.

Tomographic assessment of cerebral perfusion using a single-photon emitter (krypton-81m) and a rotating gamma camera

FAZIO, FERRUCCIO;
1980

Abstract

Continuous carotid infusion of short-lived krypton-81m (t1/2 13 sec) yields an assessment of regional cerebral perfusion. This assessment can be obtained in three dimensions if activity is recorded with a rotating gamma camera and a computer to reconstruct krypton-81m distribution in tomographic sections. These showed several advantages over conventional views: (a) visualization of blood-flow distribution within brain structures (gray and white matter, basal ganglia); (b) more accurate location and evaluation of areas of relatively reduced or increased perfusion; (c) better definition of patterns of collateral circulation; (d) greater sensitivity and specificity in detecting and defining blood-flow changes during physiological activation studies. A limitation of the krypton-81m technique is its invasiveness. However, this study shows that the combination of new advances in radiochemistry with single-photon emission computed tomography may result in accessible methods for assessing, noninvasively and in three dimensions, the behavior of cerebral function in man
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Evaluation Studies as Topic; Cerebral Angiography; Humans; Motor Activity; Radioisotopes; Tomography, Emission-Computed; Krypton; Cerebrovascular Circulation; Brain Diseases; Photography; Regional Blood Flow
English
1980
21
12
1139
1145
none
Fazio, F., Fieschi, C., Collice, M., Nardini, M., Banfi, F., Possa, M., et al. (1980). Tomographic assessment of cerebral perfusion using a single-photon emitter (krypton-81m) and a rotating gamma camera. THE JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 21(12), 1139-1145.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/35047
Citazioni
  • Scopus 10
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 28
Social impact