Morgan L C, Pearson M A, Mackey D W, Rutland J, de Iongh R U, Peters M J, van der Wall H
Department of Respiratory Medicine, Concord Repatriation General Hospital, NSW, Australia.
Nucl Med Commun. 2000 Jun;21(6):553-6. doi: 10.1097/00006231-200006000-00009.
Mucociliary clearance is impaired in many diseases of the respiratory system. We have developed a method for measuring tracheal mucus velocity by the dynamic study of a single point source of radioactivity deposited in the trachea by cricothyroid injection. Preliminary results suggest that patients with airways disease have very low tracheal mucus velocities (<2 mm x min(-1)). The aim of this experiment was to explore the ability of current scintillation detection systems to track a single point as it moves in a dynamic study in small increments and at low velocity (movements of the order of 1 mm). Background noise was estimated to contribute an error in positioning of 0.16 mm (1 standard deviation). Overall errors in velocity were estimated at 0.2 mm x min(-1). This suggests that standard instrumentation in use in most nuclear medicine departments has the capacity to measure accurately velocities as low as 1 mm x min(-1).