Title of article :
Brain hypometabolism in rare genetic neurodegenerative disease: Niemann-Pick disease type C, spinocerebellar ataxia and Huntington disease assessed by FDG PET
Author/Authors :
Kao ، Yung Hsiang Department of Nuclear Medicine - Royal Melbourne Hospital , Cheng ، Melissa Department of Nuclear Medicine - Royal Melbourne Hospital , Velakoulis ، Dennis Royal Melbourne Hospital , Walterfang ، Mark Royal Melbourne Hospital , Sivaratnam ، Dinesh Department of Nuclear Medicine - Royal Melbourne Hospital
From page :
167
To page :
172
Abstract :
Brain metabolic imaging using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) Positron Emission Tomography (PET) with contemporaneous low-dose CT may be used to assess neurodegenerative diseases. In contrast to oncology whole-body FDG PET, qualitative assessment alone in brain FDG PET is subjective and vulnerable to visual interference due to high physiologic background activity. Therefore, mild changes in brain metabolism may be visually undetectable by qualitative interpretation alone, resulting in diagnostic inaccuracy. To overcome this, some institutions may employ an objective comparison to a normal reference database. To date, there is limited literature describing brain metabolic changes in rare genetic neurodegenerative diseases such as Niemann-Pick disease Type C, spinocerebellar ataxia and Huntington disease. In this case series, we illustrate the typical FDG PET findings in the cortex and deep grey matter for these rare diseases, utilising normal database comparison including three dimensional Stereotactic Surface Projection (3D-SSP) mapping. These comparisons can generate 3D-SSP maps where metabolic changes may be expressed in standard deviations from normal (z-score) and visually depicted in a scale of colours to improve diagnostic accuracy.
Keywords :
18F , FDG PET , Neurodegenerative , Niemann , Pick disease type C , spinocerebellar atrophy , Huntington disease
Journal title :
Asia Oceania Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Biology
Journal title :
Asia Oceania Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Biology
Record number :
2658492
Link To Document :
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