Unusual intestinal and urinary tract accumulation on bone scan: A case with indiana pouch

Unusual intestinal and urinary tract accumulation on bone scan: A case with indiana pouch

U n u s u a l I n t e s t i n a l a n d U r i n a r y Tract A c c u m u l a t i o n on B o n e S c a n : A Case W i t h I n d i a n a P o u c h Shih-C...

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U n u s u a l I n t e s t i n a l a n d U r i n a r y Tract A c c u m u l a t i o n on B o n e S c a n : A Case W i t h I n d i a n a P o u c h Shih-Chuan Tsai, Chia-Hung Kao, Wan-Yu Lin, and Shyh-Jen Wang HE RADIONUCLIDE BONE scan is an important diagnostic tool in the evaluation of patients with a variety of osseous abnormalities. However, localization of bone-seeking radiotracers outside of the skeletal system has also been reported in various physical and pathologic states. Therefore, it is important that these causes of extraskeletal accumulation of bone-seeking radiotracers are kept in mind when bone-imaging studies are reviewed so that mistakes in interpretation are not made. The current case showed right abdominal radioactivity during the performance of a whole-body bone scan. This was caused by stasis of radio-labeled urine in an Indiana pouch. A 47-year-old female patient with a history of transitional cell carcinoma of the urinary bladder and left kidney was treated with a radical cystectomy and nephrectomy. She was referred to our department for a whole-body bone scan to exclude skeletal metastasis. A technetium (Tc)-99m methylene diphosphonate (MDP) bone scan revealed no evidence of skeletal metastasis. The scan did show significant accumulation of radiotracer in the right abdomen, however (Fig 1). Review of the patient's history showed that she had undergone neobladder reconstruction (Indiana pouch). An intravenous pyelogram showed accumulation of contrast media in the Indiana pouch, localizing in the right abdomen (Fig 2). The scintigraphic findings are thought to be secondary to stasis of radio-labeled urine in the Indiana pouch. An Indiana pouch is a cutaneous urinary diversion that involves the use of an ileocecal valve and a portion of the ascending colon to form a neobladder. It has been performed in patients who have had a cystectomy. In radionuclide bone scans, abnormal

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From the Departments of Nuclear Medicine, Show-Chwan Memorial Hospital Changhua and Taichung Veterans General Hospital Taichung, Taiwan, R.O.C. Address reprint requests to Chia-Hung Kao, MD, Department of Nuclear Medicine, Taichang Veterans General Hospital, 160 Taichang Harbor Road, Section 3, Taichung40705, Taiwan,R.O.C. Copyright 9 2000 by W.B. Saunders Company 0001-2998/00/3004-0008510. 00/0 doi: l O.l O53/snuc.2000.165 95

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Fig 1. A Tc-99m MDP whole-body bone scan showed no definite evidence of bone metastasis. Significant radiotracer stasis in the right abdomen (black arrows) was observed, however.

accumulation of radiotracer in the intestine has been seen in ileal conduit, a urinary diversion surgical procedure. Accumulation of radiotracer in urinary reservoirs, such as Kock pouch and sigmoid loop augmentation, also has been reported. To our knowledge, however, seeing intestinal accumulation on bone scan in patients with an Indiana pouch has not been reported. The causes of accumulation of bone-seeking radiotracers in the fight abdomen, likely intestinal and urinary tracts, are listed in the following section.

INTESTINAL TRACT UPTAKE Common

1. Ileal conduit 1,2 2. Enterovesical fistula 3-12

Seminars in Nuclear Medicine, Vol XXX, No 4 (October), 2000: pp 310-312

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Uncommon 1. Neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis 15 2. Normal intestine in children 16 Rare 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

Neuroblastoma 17 Protein-losing enteropathy as Metastatic calcification 19 Primary intestinal lymphangiectasia 2~ Systemic amyloid light-chain--derived amyloid o s i s 21

6. High aluminum content in eluent from the Tc-99m generator 22 7. Oral intake of radio-labeled urine 23,24 URINARY TRACT UPTAKE Common 1. Rupture with extravasation of urine e527 2. Dilation of urinary-collecting systema8,29 3. Ureterostomy bag 3~ 4. Bladder diverticulum 31 Fig 2. An intravenous pyelography showed accumulation of contrast media in Indiana pouch, localizing in the right abdomen (white arrows).

3. Occult gastric bleeding u 4. Intestinal infarction 12-14

Uncommon 1. Urinary reservoir (Kock pouch, sigmoid loop augmentation) 32,33 2. Urinoma 34 3. Congenital renal anomaP ~ 4. Extrophy of the bladder 35

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