Myocardial imaging with a radioiodinated norepinephrine storage analog

D M Wieland, L E Brown, W L Rogers, K C Worthington, J L Wu, N H Clinthorne, C A Otto, D P Swanson, W H Beierwaltes, D M Wieland, L E Brown, W L Rogers, K C Worthington, J L Wu, N H Clinthorne, C A Otto, D P Swanson, W H Beierwaltes

Abstract

Meta-iodobenzylguanidine (M-IBG), an iodinated aromatic analog of the hypotensive drug quanethidine, localizes in the heart of the rat, dog, and rhesus monkey. A comparative study of tissue distribution in the dog has been performed with five myocardiophilic agents: thallium-201, I-125 16-iodohexadecanoic acid, H-3 norepinephrine, C-14 guanethidine and I-125 M-IBG. The last two compounds give heart concentrations and heart-to-blood concentration ratios similar to those of thallium-201. Planar and tomographic images of the hearts of the dog and rhesus monkey were obtained using I-131 or I-123 labeled M-IBG. Blocking studies with reserpine suggest that a major component of myocardial retention of M-IBG is sequestration within the norephinephrine storage vesicles of the adrenergic nerves. The localization of M-IBG in other organs with rich sympathetic innervation and the relative insensitivity of myocardial uptake to a wide range of loading doses lend additional support for a neuronal mode of retention.

Source: PubMed

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