Abstract
A radionuclide study is described for the evaluation of hepatobiliary disease. The study consists of Au198 retention and liver scans, and radioiodinated rose bengal (RBI131) retention and serial scans of the liver and abdomen. Twenty minute RBI131 and 4.5 minute Au198 retentions are given for normals, acute hepatitis, obstructive jaundice, fibrotic liver disease with and without jaundice, acute congestive heart failure, and liver containing tumor. RBI131 retentions greater than 86 per cent indicated polygonal cell disease, whether or not excretion into the intestine was detected (Table II). Complete extrahepatic obstruction was present when the RBI131 retention was 86 per cent or less, and excretion into the intestine was not observed in the scans of the abdomen. Serial RBI131 liver and abdomen scans may exhibit the presence of a dilated biliary tree or nonuniform drainage in the liver, and thus distinguish partial obstruction from hepatocellular disease. An indeterminate group remains which consists of a RBI131 retention less than 80 per cent, excretion into the intestine, and a uniform distribution of activity in the liver with Au198 and RBI131. Intra-abdominal bile spill can be diagnosed with serial RBI131 scans. The findings in 2 cases of biliary atresia are described. A 3 month old infant with biliary atresia showed persistence of RBI131 in the liver and no excretion into the intestine which is the usual picture in obstruction, whereas a 2½ year old child showed only a transient appearance of RBI131 in the area of the liver and a higher concentration in the kidneys at 1 and 4 hours.