ABSTRACT
ABSTRACT: A 53-year-old man with persisting increased serum prostate-specific antigen level (9.53 ng/mL) and repeated negative prostate biopsies was referred for a PET/CT with 68 Ga-PSMA-11. The PET/CT revealed focal uptake in the prostate suggestive of localized prostate cancer. Incidentally, it also showed a diffuse uptake in the tracheobronchial tree suspicious for a benign etiology. Because of the clinical history of asthma exacerbation in the previous week, further supplementary studies were performed showing a pathological fractional exhaled nitric oxide level (92 ppb; reference values, <25 ppb) and mild airway obstruction in the spirometry. These findings confirmed asthma as an inflammatory etiology of the tracheobronchial PSMA uptake.
Subject(s)
Asthma , Prostatic Neoplasms , Male , Humans , Middle Aged , Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography , Oligopeptides , Edetic Acid , Gallium Radioisotopes , Prostatic Neoplasms/pathology , Asthma/complications , Asthma/diagnostic imagingABSTRACT
ABSTRACT: A 75-year-old man presented with dyspnea for more than 2 months, with blood test showing low platelet count and cardiac ultrasound showing severe pulmonary hypertension (>54 mm Hg). A CT pulmonary angiogram showed a filling defect in the pulmonary trunk, right and left pulmonary arteries, raising the possibilities of pulmonary embolism or artery sarcoma. FDG PET/CT was performed for further evaluation and showed low uptake in the pulmonary wall, which supported the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism. Patient was treated with anticoagulants with no changes on repeated CT pulmonary angiogram. Patient underwent surgery, and histopatological examination revealed a pulmonary artery sarcoma.