articleCirculationJun 11, 2002Closed access

Imaging Atherosclerotic Plaque Inflammation With [ 18 F]-Fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography

Imaging Center

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Atherosclerotic plaque rupture is usually a consequence of inflammatory cell activity within the plaque. Current imaging techniques provide anatomic data but no indication of plaque inflammation. The glucose analogue [18F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) can be used to image inflammatory cell activity non-invasively by PET. In this study we tested whether 18FDG-PET imaging can identify inflammation within carotid artery atherosclerotic plaques. METHODS AND RESULTS: Eight patients with symptomatic carotid atherosclerosis were imaged using 18FDG-PET and co-registered CT. Symptomatic carotid plaques were visible in 18FDG-PET images acquired 3 hours post-18FDG injection. The estimated net 18FDG accumulation rate (plaque/integral plasma) in symptomatic lesions was 27% higher than in contralateral asymptomatic lesions. There was no measurable 18FDG uptake into normal carotid arteries. Autoradiography of excised plaques confirmed accumulation of deoxyglucose in macrophage-rich areas of the plaque.

Conclusions

This study demonstrates that atherosclerotic plaque inflammation can be imaged with 18FDG-PET, and that symptomatic, unstable plaques accumulate more 18FDG than asymptomatic lesions.

Citation impact

1,215
total citations
FWCI
22.43
Percentile
100%
References
10
Citations per year

Authors

12

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Asymptomatic
  • Fluorodeoxyglucose
  • Positron emission tomography
  • Inflammation
  • Nuclear medicine
  • Radiology
  • Pathology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding