Abstract

Bone scintigraphy is a nuclear imaging scan using a radiopharmaceutical composed of a bisphosphonate coupled to a radionuclide (technetium 99m). Radiopharmaceutical uptake is particularly important at the level of the bone structures having a strong osteoblastic activity. These uptakes can be due to a benign pathology (fracture, loosening of prosthesis, rheumatic pathologies, etc.) or to a malignant pathology (primary or secondary bone lesion). The high sensitivity of bone scintigraphy makes it particularly interesting at the initial stage of the pathology, especially when X-rays are normal. In addition, its specificity has clearly improved in recent years with the increasingly use of tomoscintigraphy coupled with X-ray scanning (SPECT/CT). We describe the operating principle of bone scintigraphy, normal uptakes with its variants as well as pathological uptake features in traumatic, rheumatic, prosthetic or cancerous pathologies.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call