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The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 33 No. 7 1278-1282
© 1992 by Society of Nuclear Medicine
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Noninvasive In-Vivo Measurement of Hepatic and Cardiac Iron

L. Wielopolski and E.C. Zaino

Radiation Therapy Facility, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York
Mercy Hospital, Rockville Center, New York

Correspondence: For reprints contact: Dr. L. Wielopolski, Radiation Therapy Facility, Bldg. 490, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973-5000.

ABSTRACT

This study describes a new noninvasive in-vivo method of apprising human iron stores by nuclear resonance scattering (NRS). Manganese-56 is used as a source of 847 keV gamma rays which scatter resonantly from the iron in the liver and heart of patients with Cooley's anemia (thalassemia major). These patients have heavy iron overload that may lead to cardiac and other organ failure. The NRS iron quantitation of the liver compared favorably, in a linear fashion, with the iron in the liver biopsies. Above initial value, the hepatic iron correlates with the cardiac NRS signal. There is no correlation, however, between liver enzymes and degree of iron load. NRS appears to be a reliable method for measuring cardiac and hepatic iron. It may be repeated as needed to determine the effectiveness, selectivity and compliance to therapy and prognosis.







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Copyright © 1992 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine.