Nucl Med Mol Imaging.
2012 Mar;46(1):10-19.
Use of Gamma Correction Pinhole Bone Scans in Trauma
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Nuclear Medicine, Sung-Ae Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
- 2Department of Radiology, College of Medicine, Catholic University of Korea, Seoul, Korea.
- 3Institute of Catholic Integrative Medicine (ICIM), Incheon St. Mary's Hospital, Inchon, Korea. nm@catholic.ac.kr
Abstract
- 99mTc-hydroxydiphosphonate (HDP) bone scanning is a classic metabolic nuclear imaging method and the most frequently performed examination. Clinically, it has long been cherished as an indispensable diagnostic screening tool and for monitoring of patients with bone, joint, and soft tissue diseases. The HDP bone scan, the pinhole scan in particular, is known for its ability to detect increased, decreased, or defective tracer uptake along with magnified anatomy. Unfortunately, however, the findings of such uptake changes are not specific in many traumatic bone disorders, especially when lesions are minute and complex. This study discusses the recently introduced gamma correction pinhole bone scan (GCPBS), emphasizing its usefulness in the diagnosis of traumatic bone diseases including occult fractures; cervical sprains; whiplash injury; bone marrow edema; trabecular microfractures; evident, gaping, and stress fractures; and fish vertebra. Indeed, GCPBS can remarkably enhance the diagnostic feasibility of HDP pinhole bone scans by refining the topography, pathologic anatomy, and altered chemical profile of the traumatic diseases in question. The fine and precise depiction of anatomic and metabolic changes in these diseases has been shown to be unique to GCPBS, and they are not appreciated on conventional radio-graphs, multiple detector CT, or ultrasonographs. It is true that MR imaging can portray proton change, but understandably, it is a manifestation that is common to any bone disease.