Klingensmith W C, Tsan M F, Wagner H N
J Nucl Med. 1976 Aug;17(8):681-4.
Occasionally patients injected with 99mTc-sulfur colloid (TSC) for liver--spleen imaging show increased uptake by the lungs or kidneys. In animals, increased lung uptake of TSC can be produced by injecting endotoxin intraperitoneally. Using an intraperitoneal endotoxin model, we studied the effect of heparin on dose-response curves for TSC uptake by the lungs and kidneys. Over a dose range of 1 mug to 10 mg of endotoxin, TSC uptake by the lungs increased progressively; heparin had no effect. In the kidneys, endotoxin in doses from 1 mug to 1 mg resulted in an increased TSC uptake which was less marked than that in the lungs and which was also unaffected by heparin. However, at a dose of 10 mg of endotoxin, a marked increase occurred in TSC uptake by the kidneys, and this could be prevented by heparin. Although the increased TSC uptake by the kidneys at lower doses of endotoxin and by the lungs at all doses is probably not related to intraavascular coagulation, the marked increase in TSC uptake by the kidneys at 10 mg of intraperitoneal endotoxin probably is related to intravascular coagulation, possibly by entrapment in fibrin deposits in the renal capillaries.