Does 99mTc-PYP imaging correlate with pathologic lesions in experimental viral perimyocarditis?
99mTc-PYP uptake correlates with early myocardial necrosis and calcification in experimental viral perimyocarditis, providing a basis for potential human application.
The myocardial uptake of technetium-99m pyrophosphate (99mTc-PYP) in perimyocarditis induced by coxsackievirus B3 in BALB/c mice was studied. 99mTc-PYP uptake ratio, measured by the ratio of counts/min per gram for the heart to counts/min per gram for the skull, began to increase 5 days after virus inoculation when myocardial necrosis was evident. On the seventh day after the inoculation, 99mTc-PYP ratio reached a maximum. Histologically, fine, dystrophic calcification appeared in the necrotic fibers. 99mTc-PYP uptake was in proportion to the extent of the myocardial lesions. Thereafter, cellular infiltrations increased with time and were most severe on the fourteenth day, but 99mTc-PYP ratio had begun to fade. On the twenty-eighth day, perimyocardial fibrosis increased and calcification was still present, but 99mTc-PYP ratio had decreased. Myocardial uptake with severe pathologic lesions was visualized on a whole-body image on the seventh day after inoculation with the virus. The findings may provide a basis upon which 99mTc-pyp imaging may be applied to viral perimyocarditis in humans.
Matsumori et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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