Clinical and genetic studies of familial nonmedullary thyroid cancer (FNMTC) have yielded conflicting results concerning the aggressiveness of the tumors, and uncertainty of their genetic makeup. In ...most reports of multiply affected families, the composition of the kindreds has favored families of 2 affected members. Using data for differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) provided by the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) branch of the National Cancer Institute, and fine-needle aspiration data from Mayo Clinic, I found that the likelihood of 2 cases of sporadic DTC (RR) in a 9-member first-degree family was 1.25% of all DTC families, amounting to 39.4% of 306 multi-hit families reported in the literature. To study the remaining affected families I used the Bernouilli trials model of exact probability. The 60.6% of non-RR, multiply affected families are mostly concentrated in kindreds of 2 to 5 affected members. In 2-hit families, 62%-69% of affected members are sporadic (RR) cases. In families having 3 or more affected members, fewer than 6% have 1 or more sporadic (R) cases, and fewer than 0.15% have 2 or more. In families of 3 to 5 affected members, more than 96% of affected members have the familial (F) trait. Approximately 1 of 338 DTC cases carries the F-trait. Since approximately 40% of multiply affected member first-degree kindreds of DTC, and a significant majority of 2-hit families, are composed of clinically evident, sporadic cases only clinical and genetic investigations of FNMTC should center on families of 3 or more affected members.
The availability of quantitative three-dimensional in vivo data on radionuclide distributions within the body makes it possible to calculate the corresponding nonuniform distribution of radiation ...absorbed dose in body organs and tissues. This pamphlet emphasizes the utility of the MIRD schema for such calculations through the use of radionuclide S values defined at the voxel level. The use of both dose point-kernels and Monte Carlo simulation methods is also discussed. PET and SPECT imaging can provide quantitative activity data in voxels of several millimeters on edge. For smaller voxel sizes, accurate data cannot be obtained using present imaging technology. For submillimeter dimensions, autoradiographic methods may be used when tissues are obtained through biopsy or autopsy. Sample S value tabulations for five radionuclides within cubical voxels of 3 mm and 6 mm on edge are given in the appendices to this pamphlet. These S values may be used to construct three-dimensional dose profiles for nonuniform distributions of radioactivity encountered in therapeutic and diagnostic nuclear medicine. Data are also tabulated for 131I in 0.1-mm voxels for use in autoradiography. Two examples illustrating the use of voxel S values are given, followed by a discussion of the use of three-dimensional dose distributions in understanding and predicting biologic response.
The existence of a lag phase during the gastric emptying of solid foods is controversial. It has been hypothesised that among other early events, the stomach requires a period of time to process ...solid food to particles small enough to be handled as a liquid. At present no standardised curve fitting techniques exist for the characterisation and quantification of the lag phase or the emptying rate of solids and liquids. We have evaluated the ability of a modified power exponential function to define the emptying parameters of two different solid meals. Dual labelled meals were administered to 24 normal volunteers. The subjects received meals consisting of either Tc-99m in vivo labelled chicken liver or Tc-99m-egg, which have different densities, and In-111-DTPA in water. The emptying curves were biphasic in nature. For solids, this represented an initial delay in emptying or lag phase followed by an equilibrium emptying phase characterised by a constant rate of emptying. The curves were analysed using a modified power exponential function of the form y(t) = 1-(1-e-kt)beta, where y(t) is the fractional meal retention at time t, k is the gastric emptying rate in min-1, and beta is the extrapolated y-intercept from the terminal portion of the curve. The length of the lag phase and half-emptying time increased with solid food density (31 +/- 8 min and 77.6 +/- 11.2 min for egg and 62 +/- 16 min and 94.1 +/- 14.2 min for chicken liver, respectively). After the lag phase, both solids had similar emptying rates, and these rates were identical to those of the liquids. In vitro experiments indicated that the egg meal disintegrated much more rapidly than the chicken liver under mechanical agitation in gastric juice, lending further support to the hypothesis that the initial lag in emptying of solid food is due to the processing of food into particles small enough to pass the pylorus. We conclude that the modified power exponential model permits characterisation of the biphasic nature of gastric emptying allowing for quantification of the lag phase and the rate of emptying for both solids and liquids.
Transfer (rate) constants in compartmental analysis are generally considered solely in operational terms, and little attention has been paid to their physiological interpretation. In this study we ...have examined the significance of their roles in physiological terms and the implications of this interpretation. When freely diffusible tracers are introduced into the blood stream by bolus injection, the sum of the exit rate constants from the blood compartment gives the number of blood volumes turned over per unit time; when multiplied by the blood volume, this value is the cardiac output. When corrected for body weight, the product yields the cardiac index, a biological constant for large mammals. The ratio of the rate constant supplying an organ to the exit-constant sum gives fractional cardiac output, and when multiplied by the cardiac output the ratio gives organ blood flow, independent of diffusibility. For freely diffusible tracers, organ blood flow can be calculated directly from the product of the organ rate constant and blood volume. At equilibrium and at equal concentration, the ratio of rate constants between adjacent compartments gives their relative volumes; this interpretation is fundamental when partitioning compartments for detailed analysis. These considerations have been validated by testing in both animals and man. Multiple solution sets may occur in mammillary models. Knowledge of the physiological interpretation of intercompartmental rate constants is of importance not only in model interpretation but in model validation, where this information serves as an independent check on model structure and its realization.
Subclinical hyperthyroidism, defined as serum thyroid hormone levels in the reference range with low serum TSH concentration, is a well recognized clinical entity, but little information is available ...concerning the prevalence of the disorders that produce it. We conducted a 24-month retrospective survey of subclinical hyperthyroidism patients referred to a university hospital nuclear medicine service for diagnostic studies. Twenty-four consecutive patients were evaluated (22 outpatients and 2 inpatients). All patients had highly sensitive TSH determination, thyroid hormone levels, radioiodine uptake and scan (except for 2 postpartum women), and, selectively, TSH-receptor antibody (TRAb), serum thyroglobulin, antithyroid antibodies, T3-suppression test, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate. A TSH value of about 0.1 microIU/mL was used as the cutoff. Only one patient in the group had a nonthyroidal disorder. In 14 patients (61%) subclinical hyperthyroidism was self-limited, due to silent thyroiditis (5 patients), iodine-induced hyperthyroidism (3 patients), postpartum thyroiditis (2 patients), subacute thyroiditis (2 patients), and probable hemorrhage into a functioning nodule (2 patients). Of the non-self-limited disorders (39%), Graves' disease accounted for 6 patients and solitary or multinodular goiter for 3. Graves' disease proved difficult to diagnose because the thyroid gland was normal in size in two of the six patients, TRAb was positive in only two of six, and the radioiodine uptake and gradient were normal in all six; the T3-suppression test was positive in two of two patients. We conclude that the causes of subclinical hyperthyroidism are the disorders that commonly produce overt thyrotoxicosis in medical practice, Graves' disease being the most frequent. However, the tests used to diagnose overt Graves' disease often fail in the setting of subclinical hyperthyroidism, except possibly the T3-suppression test.
We evaluated intragastric food distribution and antral motor activity in patients with functional dyspepsia.
A standard gastric emptying test and dynamic imaging of the antrum were used to ...characterize gastric antral motility disturbances and to correlate them with total and compartmental gastric emptying in 25 dyspeptic patients.
We found a 40% prevalence of gastroparesis in functional dyspepsia. Solid gastric emptying delay is indicated by a prolonged lag phase and an increase in frequency and amplitude of gastric contractions, resulting in nonexpulsive antral contractions and/or antropyloric dyscoordination. Food retention in the distal stomach and antral distention appears to account for patients' dyspeptic symptoms.
This study demonstrates that scintigraphy not only detects abnormalities of food distribution in the stomach but also provides information on antral motor activity noninvasively. Dynamic antral scintigraphy and compartmental gastric emptying are useful tools to define the pathophysiology of dyspeptic patients with or without gastroparesis.
We sought to investigate the effect of lung volume reduction surgery (LVRS) on regional lung ventilation.
Retrospective analysis of routinely acquired data before and after LVRS.
Large, urban, ...university medical center.
Twenty-nine patients with severe emphysema.
Bilateral LVRS.
(133)Xe washout curves during lung scintigraphy exhibit a biphasic pattern (the first component of the washout curve m(r) corresponds to an initial rapid phase in washout that reflects larger airways emptying, and the second component m(s) reflects a slower phase of washout that is attributed to gas elimination via smaller airways). We analyzed six standardized regions of the lung (upper, mid, and lower zones of the right and left lung), and calculated m(r) and m(s) for each lung region. The mean (+/- SE) baseline FEV(1) was 0.69+/-0.04 L, total lung capacity (TLC) was 139 +/-4% predicted, and the residual volume (RV)/TLC ratio was 65+/-2%. The mean improvement in FEV(1) 3 months post-LVRS was 38%. Post-LVRS, m(r) and m(s) increased in 79 and 74 lung regions, respectively, and there was no relationship with respect to lung regions that had or had not been operated on. The increase in m(s), however, significantly correlated with the increase in FEV(1) (r = 0.66; p<0.0001) and the decrease in RV/TLC (r = -0.67; p<0.0001). An increase in m(s) also correlated with a decrease in PaCO(2) (r = -0.39; p = 0.03), but m(r) showed no relationship with any parameter.
Small airways ventilation in lung regions that had and had not been operated on is associated with a greater improvement in lung mechanics following LVRS.