IMAGING SMALL PULMONARY ISCHEMIC LESIONS AFTER RADIOACTIVE CARBON-MONOXIDE INHALATION

  • 1 January 1976
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 17 (10), 866-871
Abstract
A new method is described for imaging small ischemic regions in the lung immediately after a single breath of radioactive carbon monoxide (11CO). A tungsten-collimated scintillation camera is used to visualize the 0.51-MeV annihilation photons due to the 11C. In normal dogs the entire field is cleared of 11CO within 10 s. However, in dogs with experimentally occluded 2-mm-diameter segmental arteries, the ischemic but well-ventilated segment appears as a region of persistent high radioactivity, due most likely to temporary entrapment of 11CO-labeled red blood cells in the ischemic region. This technique also provides a simple noninvasive means for instantly labeling the systemic circulation without left heart catheterization.

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