Abstract

BackgroundMultiple disposable syringe designs are available both with and without silicone lubricant. Tc99m sestamibi variably adheres to certain syringe designs. In practice, this increases pre-injection activity to ensure constant acceptable image quality in the setting of high adherence. MethodsThe residual activity following 35 Tc99m MDP injections was used as a proxy for the dead-space residual activity. This was compared to Tc99m sestamibi injections in the same syringe in 107 injections, a syringe without lubricant in 35 injections, and a syringe without lubricant or rubber gasket in 16 injections. The syringe with lubricated barrel was disassembled and each part separately assayed to see which part demonstrated the most adherence. ResultsThe standard design demonstrated a mean adherence of 26% (SD 7.0%). This was significantly more than the 6% (SD 3.7%) demonstrated with MDP. The two designs without silicone lubricant demonstrated mean adherence of 7.2% (SD 2.3%) and 6.4% (SD 2.3%). Disassembly of the three part syringe showed the greatest adherence to the rubber gasket. ConclusionsQC procedures determining adherence in the administration syringe are warranted for any change in syringe design or manufacturer. If adherence is present, conversion to non-lubricated plastic syringes with lower and more predictable retention of Tc99m sestamibi enables more precise titration of prescribed activities and reduction of overall patient absorbed doses.

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