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Radiology, Vol 188, 347-350, Copyright © 1993 by Radiological Society of North America


ARTICLES

Supraophthalmic chemotherapy with long tapered catheter: distribution evaluated with intraarterial and intravenous Tc-99m HMPAO

S Aoki, H Terada, S Kosuda, N Shitara, H Fujii, K Suzuki, Y Kutsukake, J Tanaka, Y Sasaki and T Okubo
Department of Radiology, Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital, Japan.

Supraophthalmic intraarterial chemotherapy has not become popular due to a high incidence of damage to the normal brain and eye. This damage is due to inhomogeneous distribution of the agent secondary to streaming and other flow-related phenomena. To try to minimize this complication, the authors developed a catheter and studied different infusion techniques. A 4.5-F catheter tapered to 2.5 F was used to perform supraophthalmic intraarterial chemotherapy in 26 patients with malignant gliomas. Forty-one of 45 catheterizations were successful. In 17 patients (20 procedures), technetium-99m hexamethyl-propyleneamine oxime (HMPAO) was then injected through the catheter and single photon emission computed tomography was performed to assess the cerebral distribution of the radiopharmaceutical with either a pulsatile or continuous infusion technique. Diffuse and relatively homogeneous distribution of Tc-99m HMPAO was observed with fast pulsatile infusion (10 of 10 procedures); however, inhomogeneous distribution was mostly seen with slow continuous infusion (eight of 10 procedures).


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Am. J. Neuroradiol.Home page
R. Agid, R. Rubinstein, T. Siegal, H. Lester, F. Bokstein, R. Chisin, and J. M. Gomori
Does Streaming Affect the Cerebral Distribution of Infraophthalmic Intracarotid Chemotherapy?
AJNR Am. J. Neuroradiol., November 1, 2002; 23(10): 1732 - 1735.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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