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Dive into the research topics where S. E. M. Clarke is active.

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Featured researches published by S. E. M. Clarke.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1993

Comparison of simultaneous 99mTc-HMPAO and 111In oxine labelled white cell scans in the assessment of inflammatory bowel disease.

R. A. Allan; G. E. Sladen; S. Bassingham; C. R. Lazarus; S. E. M. Clarke; Ignac Fogelman

Forty-seven patients, 29 with chronic inflammatory bowel disease (1131) and 18 with presumed irritable bowel syndrome, including one with uncomplicated diverticular disease, were studied with simultaneous technetium-99m hexamethylpropylene amine oxime and indium-111 oxine labelled leucocyte scans performed at 1, 3 and 24 h. Twenty-seven patients with IBD had active disease as judged by clinical and laboratory criteria and all of these had positive scans with both agents. No false positive studies were obtained. The 1-h 99mTc-HMPAO WBC scans showed the same distribution to disease as the 3-h 111-In WBC scans, with no difference in intensity (P < 0.92); they showed more extensive disease (P < 0.02) and more intense uptake (P < 0.001) than did the 1-h 111-In scans. The 3-h 99mTc-HMPAO WBC scans showed more extensive disease (P < 0.002), with greater intensity (P < 0.0005), than did the 3-h 111In WBC scans. Physiological bowel activity on 3-h 99mTc-HMPAO WBC scans was present in 12 patients but was faint and did not interfere with assessment of disease extent and activity. It is concluded that in terms of isotope availability, radiation dosimetry and image quality, 99mTc-HMPAO is the agent of choice in detecting active IBD, with localization of disease possible at 1-h after re-injection and optimal resolution and definition of disease extent at 3 h. A negative scan reliably excludes active disease.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1992

An evaluation of Technegas as a ventilation agent compared with krypton-81 m in the scintigraphic diagnosis of pulmonary embolism

Gary Cook; S. E. M. Clarke

A ventilation agent that provides good quality lung images, which is cheap, easy to use and non-toxic, with a low radiation dose, has long been sought. Technegas, an ultrafine aerosol of technetium-99m-labelled carbon, was developed with these qualities in mind. We have studied Technegas in a clinical setting to evaluate some of these qualities. Twenty-five patients referred with a diagnosis of suspected pulmonary embolism were investigated during the same study using both krypton-81m and Technegas as ventilation agents in conjunction with99mTc-macroaggregated albumin as a perfusion agent. Technegas provided images which were of satisfactory quality. Images were obtained relatively easily and without discomfort to the patient, and Technegas has the advantage of always being available. A semi-quantitative regional assessment was employed which showed a good correlation (r = 0.499, P <0.001) between Technegas and krypton-81 m ventilation. We report on an effect not previously found to be significant, that is lung regions were better ventilated with Technegas than with krypton-81 m. This altered the diagnostic probability rating of pulmonary embolism in a number of patients (n = 3, 12%) compared with krypton-81 m. This effect was also noted in a further 8 patients (32%) without a change in the diagnostic probability. We offer possible explanations for this phenomenon.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1991

Radionuclide therapy of the thyroid

S. E. M. Clarke

Radionuclide therapy has a proven place in the management of patients with thyroid disease. Iodine-131 therapy has been established as both successful and safe in treating patients with thyrotoxicosis and thyroid malignancy. Protocols for patient treatment are now standardised, although some variation in practice exists across Europe. There remains much confusion as to which patients should be selected for treatment with radio-iodine for thyrotoxicosis and what dose should be administered. A review of the literature reveals that many of the theoretical hazards of treatment with radioiodine have not been encountered despite many years of usage. New therapies for medullary thyroid cancer are now being evaluated and recent promising developments are discussed in detail.


British Journal of Radiology | 1987

The role of technetium-99m pentavalent DMSA in the management of patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid

S. E. M. Clarke; Colin R. Lazarus; Raman Mistry; Michael N. Maisey

In order to assess the role of 99Tcm pentavalent dimercaptosuccinic acid (99Tcm (V)DMSA) scanning in the management of patients with medullary carcinoma of the thyroid, we imaged 10 patients with histologically proven disease. Nine of the 10 patients were scanned after removal of the primary tumour, but with symptomatic or biochemical evidence of recurrence. One patient was imaged prior to thyroidectomy. In eight of the 10 patients 99Tcm(V)DMSA successfully identified tumour deposits, and it has been shown in this study to be a cheap, convenient radiopharmaceutical for studying this group of patients, producing high-quality images with low radiation doses, and contributing significantly to patient management.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1993

Bone single-photon emission tomography in recent meniscal tears: an assessment of diagnostic criteria.

P.J. Ryan; M. Taylor; M. Grevitt; P. Allen; J. Shields; S. E. M. Clarke; Ignac Fogelman

Bone single-photon emission tomography (SPET) was performed in 40 patients within 6 months of acute knee injury where internal derangement of the knee was suspected, and the results related to the arthroscopy findings. Scan features with high sensitivity, specificity, and predictive accuracy for a meniscal tear could not be obtained on planar imaging. However, a half-crescent or more of increased tibial plateau activity on transaxial SPET gave a sensitivity of 89%, a specificity of 76%, a positive predictive accuracy of 77% and a negative predictive value of 89%. For longitudinal (bucket handle) tears alone the optimum scan pattern was a full crescent of increased tibial plateau activity with adjacent femoral activity and increased blood pool activity which gave corresponding values of 78%, 94%, 78% and 93%. It is concluded that the inclusion of tibial plateau activity of less than a full crescent and the presence of femoral condyle and blood pool activity in the diagnostic criteria improves the ability of bone SPET to detect meniscal tears. The value of bone SPET in the diagnosis of meniscal tears suggests that it could have a significant role to play in the management of knee injuries.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1986

Radionuclide measurement of right ventricular function in atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect and complete transposition of the great arteries

Edward Baker; Chen Shubao; S. E. M. Clarke; Ignac Fogelman; M. N. Maisey; Michael Tynan

Right ventricular (RV) function was assessed in 80 patients with congenital heart disease by first-pass and gated equilibrium radionuclide angiography. In 30 patients with a ventricular septal defect (VSD) the mean RV ejection fraction (+/- standard deviation) was 64 +/- 7%. In 30 patients with a secundum atrial septal defect it was 61 +/- 9% and in 20 patients with surgically corrected complete transposition of the great arteries it was 49 +/- 13%. These values are in close agreement with values established with cineangiography for similar groups of patients. The mean ejection fraction in the group with transposition of the great arteries was significantly less than in the group with VSD (p less than 0.001). Phase analysis of the equilibrium studies showed that there was delayed RV contraction in many patients in the absence of conduction abnormalities. This delay was significantly greater in patients with atrial septal defect than in those with VSD (p less than 0.05). There was a strong correlation between size of left-to-right shunt and phase delay in patients with VSD (r = -0.72). Thus, first-pass gated radionuclide angiography provides a valid measurement of RV ejection fraction, and delayed RV contraction on phase analysis may be a sensitive index of early RV dysfunction.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 1996

Technetium-99m tetrofosmin myocardial perfusion scan: comparison of 1-day and 2-day protocols

T. K. Au Yong; John Chambers; M. N. Maisey; I. Fogelma; S. E. M. Clarke

Nineteen patients with angina were recruited in this study for comparison of two 1-day protocols (stress-4 h rest and rest-4-h stress) and a 2-day protocol of technetium-99m tetrofosmin single-photon emission tomography (SPET). All of them underwent coronary angiography before or after the study. Exercise stress-rest study and rest-stress study were performed on two consecutive days. Delayed imaging was performed before the rest injection on the 2nd day. The stress study on the 1 st day and rest study on the 2nd day were considered as a 2-day protocol. The 1-day stress-rest protocol had a sensitivity of 100% (18/18) and an accuracy of 100% (19/19) in diagnosing ischaemic heart disease. The 1-day rest-stress protocol had a sensitivity of 94.4% (17/18) and an accuracy of 94.7% (18/19). These differences were not statistically significant (P=0.5 for sensitivity and accuracy). There was also no statistically significant difference between the two protocols in the diagnosis of ischaemic heart disease in individual artery territories. For the left descending artery, sensitivity was 88.2% (15/17) vs 76.5% (13/17) (P=0.48) for the stress-rest and rest-stress studies respectively. For the left circumflex artery, sensitivity was 90% (9/10) vs 80% (8/10) (P=1) and specificity was 66.7% (6/9) vs 77.8% (7/9) (P=1) respectively. For the right coronary artery, the sensitivity was 100% (16/16) vs 94% (15/16) (P=1) respectively, while the specificity was 33.3% (1/3) in both studies. Three hundred and forty-two myocardial segments were analysed. The stress-rest and 2-day protocols showed no statistically significant difference in the overall identification of segments with reversible ischaemia (48/141 segments vs 48/141 segments) or in respect of individual artery territories. There was also no significant difference in the identification of reversible ischaemic segments between the rest-stress and 2-day protocols (48/141 segments vs 34/135 segments,P=0.14). Abdominal activity was seen in 36 studies and interpretation was affected in five of them. Five patients with 24-h delayed images were evaluated and 24 segments with washout were identified. It is concluded that99mTc-tetrofosmin is a valuable new tracer in the investigation of ischaemic heart disease. The 1-day stress-rest protocol is as good as the 1-day rest-stress protocol in diagnosing coronary heart disease. The 1-day protocols and the 2-day protocol display no difference in identifying segments with reversible ischaemia.


British Journal of Radiology | 1991

Metastatic squamous carcinoma in the neck: an anatomical and physiological study using CT and SPECT 99Tcm(V) DMSA

J. C. Watkinson; Colin R. Lazarus; C. Todd; M. N. Maisey; S. E. M. Clarke

Technetium-99m (99Tcm) (V) dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) is a new tumour imaging agent that has been used to image squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the head and neck. This study has been undertaken to compare clinical examination with computed tomography (CT) (anatomical) and SPECT 99Tcm (V) DMSA (physiological) imaging in the evaluation of metastatic SCC of the neck. Twenty-five patients with head and neck cancer were studied. Computed tomography was as sensitive but more accurate than clinical examination in predicting the presence of cancer. SPECT 99Tcm (V) DMSA was inferior to both techniques in identifying metastatic disease. There is no role for SPECT 99Tcm (V) DMSA imaging in the management of patients with SCC metastatic to the neck. Combined imaging with CT offered no advantages over anatomical imaging with CT alone. There is no role for CT in the routine evaluation of the clinically N0 neck and the role of CT of the neck in the management of patients with metastatic SCC is discussed.


Journal of Laryngology and Otology | 1990

Technetium-99m(v) dimercaptosuccinic acid planar scintigraphy in head and neck cancer: clinical, scintigraphic and radiological study.

J. C. Watkinson; C. E. C. Todd; C. R. Lazarus; M. N. Maisey; S. E. M. Clarke

Technetium-99m (Tc99m)(v) Dimercaptosuccinic Acid (DMSA) is an imaging agent which has been proposed as a scintigraphic marker for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma. Fifty-four patients were studied of whom 51 had a head and neck tumour. All patients were examined and then imaged using Tc99m(v) DMSA scintigraphy and computerized tomography. Scintigraphy was less sensitive than clinical examination in the detection of patients with cancer, patients with primary tumours and patients with metastatic neck disease. CT was as sensitive and as accurate as clinical examination but more sensitive than Tc99m(v) DMSA in detecting patients with cancer and with primary tumours. CT was more sensitive and more accurate than both clinical examination and Tc99m(v) DMSA scintigraphy in predicting which patients had metastatic neck disease. Although Tc99m(v) DMSA is accumulated by squamous cell carcinoma, its inability to detect low volume disease and apparent low specificity means it has no role to play in the management of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma.


British Journal of Radiology | 1989

The localization of myocardial ischaemia with technetium-99m methoxy isobutyl isonitrile and single photon emission computed tomography.

D. J. West; Y. C. Najm; R. Mistry; S. E. M. Clarke; I. Fogelman; M. N. Maisey

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Hosahalli Mohan

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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