Abstract
Background - We explored the feasibility of measuring regional tracer activity concentrations and flow defects in myocardium of rats with a high spatial resolution small-animal PET system (microPET). Methods and Results - Myocardial images were obtained after intravenous 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) in 11 normal rats (group 1) and assembled into polar maps. Regional 18F activity concentrations were measured in 9 regions of interest and compared with tissue activity concentrations measured by well counting. In another 9 rats (group 2), myocardial perfusion images were acquired with 13N-ammonia at baseline and during coronary occlusion. On the polar maps recorded during coronary occlusion, the size of perfusion defects was measured as the myocardium with <50% of maximum activity and expressed as percent total myocardium and was correlated with the area at risk defined by postmortem staining. The diagnostic quality of 18FDG and 13N-ammonia microPET images was good to excellent; the images were easily assembled into polar maps. In group 1, regional 18F concentrations by microPET and postmortem were correlated linearly (r=0.99; P<0.01 for average and r=0.97; P<0.01 for regional concentrations). In group 2, perfusion defect sizes by microPET and postmortem were correlated linearly (P<0.01; r=0.93). Conclusions - The findings indicate the feasibility of noninvasive studies of the myocardium in rats with a dedicated small-animal PET-imaging device.
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Kudo, T., Fukuchi, K., Annala, A. J., Chatziioannou, A. F., Allada, V., Dahlbom, M., … Schelbert, H. R. (2002). Noninvasive measurement of myocardial activity concentrations and perfusion defect sizes in rats with a new small-animal positron emission tomograph. Circulation, 106(1), 118–123. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000020221.28996.78
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