Increased splenic fluorodeoxyglucose uptake in a patient with granulomatous angitis.
Journal: Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan)
Published:
Abstract
Although utility of 18F-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) has been rehearsed in large vessel vasculitides, it is not known if small vessel vasculitides are also associated with increased FDG uptake. Hereby described is a 64-year-old female patient with prolonged fever and splenomegaly, which was depicted as a hot area in FDG-PET. Splenectomy disclosed microaneurysms, giant cell granuloma, perivascular leukocytic infiltration with fibrinoid necrosis, consistent with granulomatous angitis. Serum myeloperoxidase-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody was positive. The present case illustrates that vasculitides affecting small vessels present increased FDG uptake as do those affecting large vessels.
Authors
Hiroshi Maruoka, Takeharu Koga, Masaaki Takeo, Seiyo Honda, Kentaro Yuge, Takaaki Fukuda, Hisamichi Aizawa
Relevant Conditions