dc.description.abstract | Background: 99mTc-DMSA is a common paediatric renal scintigraphy
study, where radiopharmaceutical is introduced intravenously using
disposable syringes. Radiopharmaceuticals can be retained on disposable
syringes, causing under-dosing, and impacting imaging quality in
paediatric patients. The study aimed to specify the factors affecting on
retention of 99mTc-DMSA in disposable syringes. Furthermore, the
influence of the medical staff, patient positioning, and the ascendancy of
the MON.TEK 99mMo/99mTc generator were investigated.
Methods: A study of 212 paediatric patients undergoing99mTc-DMSA renal
scintigraphy was conducted using CAPINTEC-CRC-15R and CAPINTEC
CRC/15 BETA radiation dose calibrators. The99mTc-Pertechnetate was
eluted with a MON.TEK 99mMo/99mTc generator and the radio
pharmaceutical volume were recorded. Six types of 1ml/1cc disposable
syringes (Types 1-6) and one 1ml insulin syringe (Type 7) were used. Pre
and post-doses of these syringes were measured.he administered activity
value was considered to develop DRL.
Conflicts of Interest: None
Funding: None.
Ethics Approval: The approval for the
research proposal for this study was
obtained from the Ethical Review
Committee (ERC) of the Faculty of
Medicine, General Sir John Kotelawala
Defence University. Permission for data
collection and the continuation of the
study was obtained from the Institutional
Review Boards of Lady Ridgeway
Hospital for Children, Borella, and Lanka
Hospital, Narahenpita, Sri Lanka.
Results: Results showed a significant moderate, positive correlation
between retention dose and dilution (radiopharmaceutical volume). There
was no correlation between retention dose and pre-dose or patient weight.
No significant difference in retention was found based on patient gender
or position. Significant differences in retention dose were observed among
syringe types, injection sites, labeling personnel, and administering
personnel.
Conclusion: Retention of 99mTc-DMSA varies by syringe type, with
Type-1 syringes showing the highest retention and Type-7 the lowest,
making Type-7 the most suitable. Retention is influenced by
radiopharmaceutical dilution, labeling, injecting personnel, and injection
site, while pre-dose, patient gender, weight, positioning, and decay time
have no significant effect. This highlights the importance of syringe
selection and standardizing procedures to minimize retention, improve
dosing accuracy, and enhance imaging quality. | en_US |