Equilibrium red blood cell phleboscintigraphy of the lower limbs for the diagnostic management of chronic venous disease has been proposed. The aim of this study was to verify the correlation of the phleboscintigraphic assessment of chronic venous disease with the clinical grading of the severity of the disease, since other diagnostic modalities have been recently demonstrated a poor and only partial correlation. Equilibrium Tc-99m-red blood cell phleboscintigraphy was performed in 27 patients with chronic venous disease. Scintigraphic images of 52 limbs were classified according to a four-class qualitative grading of the severity of the venous disease, and a quantitative scintigraphic index (saphena /femoral ratio) was assigned to each limb. The scintigraphic qualitative grading showed a highly significant correlation with the clinical grading (Rs=0.82, p<0.01), a good interobserver and intraobserver agreement (86.5% and 92.3%, respectively) and more than 90% sensitivity and specificity to identify the categories "minimal or no chronic venous disease" or "more significant disease" (assessed according to the Bayes theorem). Sensitivity and specificity results for the quantitative assessment were not as good. Phleboscintigraphy correlates well with the clinical grading of the severity of chronic venous disease of the lower limbs and may have potential as a valuable diagnostic tool for the noninvasive assessment of chronic venous disease.

Calcagni, M., Rulli, F., GALLINELLA MUZI, M., Martino, G., D'Andrea, G., Zanella, E. (2001). Correlation of Tc-99m-red blood cell phleboscintigraphy with clinical severity of chronic venous disease. VASCULAR SURGERY, 35(4), 273-283 [10.1177/153857440103500406].

Correlation of Tc-99m-red blood cell phleboscintigraphy with clinical severity of chronic venous disease

GALLINELLA MUZI, MARCO;
2001-01-01

Abstract

Equilibrium red blood cell phleboscintigraphy of the lower limbs for the diagnostic management of chronic venous disease has been proposed. The aim of this study was to verify the correlation of the phleboscintigraphic assessment of chronic venous disease with the clinical grading of the severity of the disease, since other diagnostic modalities have been recently demonstrated a poor and only partial correlation. Equilibrium Tc-99m-red blood cell phleboscintigraphy was performed in 27 patients with chronic venous disease. Scintigraphic images of 52 limbs were classified according to a four-class qualitative grading of the severity of the venous disease, and a quantitative scintigraphic index (saphena /femoral ratio) was assigned to each limb. The scintigraphic qualitative grading showed a highly significant correlation with the clinical grading (Rs=0.82, p<0.01), a good interobserver and intraobserver agreement (86.5% and 92.3%, respectively) and more than 90% sensitivity and specificity to identify the categories "minimal or no chronic venous disease" or "more significant disease" (assessed according to the Bayes theorem). Sensitivity and specificity results for the quantitative assessment were not as good. Phleboscintigraphy correlates well with the clinical grading of the severity of chronic venous disease of the lower limbs and may have potential as a valuable diagnostic tool for the noninvasive assessment of chronic venous disease.
2001
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE
English
Severity of Illness Index; Sensitivity and Specificity; Humans; Erythrocytes; Vascular Diseases; Predictive Value of Tests; Evaluation Studies as Topic; Extremities; Technetium Compounds; Veins; Sodium Pertechnetate Tc 99m; Chronic Disease; Middle Aged; Gated Blood-Pool Imaging; Observer Variation; Female; Male
Calcagni, M., Rulli, F., GALLINELLA MUZI, M., Martino, G., D'Andrea, G., Zanella, E. (2001). Correlation of Tc-99m-red blood cell phleboscintigraphy with clinical severity of chronic venous disease. VASCULAR SURGERY, 35(4), 273-283 [10.1177/153857440103500406].
Calcagni, M; Rulli, F; GALLINELLA MUZI, M; Martino, G; D'Andrea, G; Zanella, E
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/71927
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