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Sundram FX, Lee ST: Radionuclide lung scanning in the management of respiratory burns. Ann Acad Med Singapore. 1992 Sep;21(5):630-4. Soluble radioaerosols such as technetium-99m diethylene triamine pentacetate (DTPA) permit simple quantitative studies of alveolar-capillary permeability to be performed, since the submicronic aerosols are deposited mainly at the lung periphery and are cleared across the alveolar-capillary membrane. Regional alterations in permeability can also be noted using this radionuclide technique. We have measured the alteration in pulmonary epithelial permeability in normal subjects and in patients with inhalation burns using a computer-linked gamma-camera. In the normal volunteers, the time taken for 50% of inhaled Tc-99m DTPA to be cleared from the lungs (T1/2) was 66 minutes +/- 1sd of 12 minutes. In the 42 patients with inhalation burns, besides the T1/2, retention images of uncleared Tc-99m DTPA in the lungs were obtained to note regional differences, if any, in lung clearance arising from pulmonary epithelial damage; these patients showed increased rate of clearance (short T1/2) with mean T1/2 of 36 minutes +/- 1sd of 11 minutes, while the retention images revealed regional lung damage in moderately severe inhalation burns. In 18 patients with abnormal T1/2, 16 (89%) had abnormal bronchoscopy findings. Fifteen patients also had lung perfusion scans with Tc-99m MAA (macroaggregated albumin). The regional defects in perfusion when present were generally matched with the defects seen on ventilation scans. The Tc-99m DTPA lung clearance measurement and imaging has clinical usefulness in suspected inhalation burns. |
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