601. Bone-marrow imaging with indium-111 chloride in aplastic anemia and myelofibrosis: concise communication.
- Author
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Sayle BA, Helmer RE 3rd, Birdsong BA, Balachandran S, and Gardner FH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Anemia, Aplastic blood, Anemia, Aplastic drug therapy, Bone Marrow pathology, Child, Erythrocytes metabolism, Erythrocytes pathology, Half-Life, Humans, Iron blood, Primary Myelofibrosis blood, Primary Myelofibrosis drug therapy, Radionuclide Imaging, Transferrin analysis, Anemia, Aplastic diagnostic imaging, Bone Marrow diagnostic imaging, Indium, Primary Myelofibrosis diagnostic imaging, Radioisotopes
- Abstract
Twenty-nine patients with aplastic anemia and 11 patients with myelofibrosis were evaluated with indium-111 chloride bone-marrow imaging, ferrokinetics, and bone-marrow core biopsies. There was good correlation between the erythrocyte cellularity of the marrow and the In-111 bone-marrow scan grades in most patients. In some, the overall scan grade tended to underestimate the erythroid elements because the core biopsy had been taken from the area of the greatest radionuclide concentration on the scan. In patients with aplastic anemia, there was good correlation between the plasma iron clearance t1/2 and the scan grade. Less agreement was found in the comparison between the Fe-59 sacral and organ counts and the red-cell iron utilization. In patients with myelofibrosis, there was poor correlation between the surface counts over the sacrum and the red-cell iron utilization. Plasma iron clearances were abnormally short and were unrelated to the transferrin saturation levels. Eighteen patients were studied several times to evaluate their responses to steroid therapy. In all, there was good correlation between the bone-marrow imaging, the erythrocyte cellularity, ferrokinetics, and the patient's response to therapy. Indium-111 bone-marrow imaging is useful both in evaluating marrow erythroid activity and in following the response to therapy in patients with these diseases.
- Published
- 1982