正电子发射断层摄影术
核医学
示踪剂
缩放比例
Pet成像
医学
心理学
数学
物理
核物理学
几何学
作者
William E. Klunk,Robert A. Koeppe,Julie C. Price,Tammie L.S. Benzinger,Michael D. Devous,William J. Jagust,Keith A. Johnson,Chester A. Mathis,Davneet Minhas,Michael J. Pontecorvo,Christopher C. Rowe,Daniel Skovronsky,Mark A. Mintun
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jalz.2014.07.003
摘要
Abstract Although amyloid imaging with PiB‐PET ([C‐11]Pittsburgh Compound‐B positron emission tomography), and now with F‐18‐labeled tracers, has produced remarkably consistent qualitative findings across a large number of centers, there has been considerable variability in the exact numbers reported as quantitative outcome measures of tracer retention. In some cases this is as trivial as the choice of units, in some cases it is scanner dependent, and of course, different tracers yield different numbers. Our working group was formed to standardize quantitative amyloid imaging measures by scaling the outcome of each particular analysis method or tracer to a 0 to 100 scale, anchored by young controls (≤45 years) and typical Alzheimer's disease patients. The units of this scale have been named “Centiloids.” Basically, we describe a “standard” method of analyzing PiB PET data and then a method for scaling any “nonstandard” method of PiB PET analysis (or any other tracer) to the Centiloid scale.
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