Artigo Revisado por pares

Assessment of Gallium‐67 Scanning in Pulmonary and Extrapulmonary Sarcoidosis

1986; Wiley; Volume: 465; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1749-6632.1986.tb18522.x

ISSN

1749-6632

Autores

Harold L. Israel, GEORGE F. GUSHUE, CHAN H. PARK,

Tópico(s)

Sarcoidosis and Beryllium Toxicity Research

Resumo

Gallium-67 scans have been widely employed in patients with sarcoidosis as a means of indicating alveolitis and the need for corticosteroid therapy. Observation of 32 patients followed 3 or more years after gallium scans showed no correlation between findings and later course: of 10 patients with pulmonary uptake, 7 recovered with minor residuals; of 18 patients with mediastinal of extrathoracic uptake, 10 had persistent or progressive disease; of 4 patients with negative initial scans, 2 had later progression. The value of gallium-67 scans as an aid to diagnosis was studied in 40 patients with extrapulmonary sarcoidosis. In 12 patients, abnormal lacrimal, nodal, or pulmonary uptake aided in selection of biopsy sites. Gallium-67 scans and serum ACE levels were compared in 97 patients as indices of clinical activity. Abnormal gallium-67 uptake was observed in 96.3% of the tests in active disease, and ACE level elevation occurred in 56.3%. In 24 patients with inactive or recovered disease, abnormal gallium-67 uptake occurred in 62.5% and ACE level elevation in 37.5%. Gallium-67 scans have a limited but valuable role in the diagnosis and management of sarcoidosis.

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