Celen Y Z, Zincirkeser S, Akdemir I, Yilmaz M
Department of Nuclear Medicine, University of Gaziantep, School of Medicine, Turkey.
Nucl Med Commun. 2000 Sep;21(9):817-22. doi: 10.1097/00006231-200009000-00006.
This study aimed to investigate the microvascular pathology in the lower limbs of diabetic patients without symptoms or findings of peripheral ischaemia by measuring perfusion reserve scintigraphically. It was carried out in 47 female subjects who had no evidence of peripheral arterial disease in their history, physical examination or Doppler ultrasonography. The diabetic group consisted of 25 women (mean age 54.2 +/- 3.54 years) with type II diabetes mellitus of more than 10 years' duration. A control group consisted of 22 healthy non-diabetic women (mean age 50.14 +/- 6.75 years). Each subject flexed their right foot maximally both dorsally and plantar 60 times. In the middle of this exercise, 370 MBq technetium-99m-methoxyisobutylisonitrile (99Tc(m)-MIBI) was injected intravenously. Ten minutes after the injection, a posterior image of both calves was obtained using a gamma camera. Rectangular regions of interest were symmetrically drawn over both calves. The total count in the resting calf was subtracted from the total count in the exercising calf, and the percentage increase, termed the perfusion reserve, was determined. A significant difference was found between the perfusion reserves of the diabetic and control groups (76.04 +/- 12.96% and 95.91 +/- 12.83%, respectively; P<0.001). In conclusion, microvascular pathology may be determined scintigraphically by measuring the perfusion reserve in the lower limb muscles in diabetic patients. This method may also be used to evaluate perfusion abnormalities in other circulatory disorders.