Kitty
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Edit: Or maybe they did test some?
I thought they'd said they had. But I've been knocked flat by a new med, so my brain's all over the place—apologies if I misunderstood.
Edit: Or maybe they did test some?
No I must have misremembered if they're saying they plan to add more males.But I've been knocked flat by a new med, so my brain's all over the place—apologies if I misunderstood.
The tracers are certain molecules that release radiation. If they're inside a patient, a PET scanner can detect the radiation which lets you pinpoint the exact location it came from, thus where in the body the tracer is.By the way, I am a bit fuzzy on exactly what these tracers do and precisely what it is they measure.
Would anyone care to explain like I'm brain foggy? (because I am!)
Thanks, that's really helpful!The tracers are certain molecules that release radiation. If they're inside a patient, a PET scanner can detect the radiation which lets you pinpoint the exact location it came from, thus where in the body the tracer is.
They make tracers that stick to specific molecules that exist inside humans that they are interested in finding. In the above case, the tracer 11C-DPA-713 sticks to a protein called TSPO that some cells have. If you inject the tracer, it sticks to the TSPO in the body, wherever it happens to be, and then lights up on the scanner images showing you where the TSPO is.
So the images are basically, where is the TSPO in each person, and how much is there.
And hopefully someone else can provide more detail about TSPO specifically, but just going by what she said in the symposium and research roadmap webinar, it's a molecule on a cell's mitochondria. Some of the cells that have the highest levels of it are glial cells and immune cells, maybe highest of all being microglia and macrophages but I'm not positive about that. So if you see a lot of TSPO in a certain location, that might mean there are lots of immune cells there for some reason.
So could one conceivably make tracers for gamma delta t cells, gamma/type 1 interferons, or whatever other cells we might suspect are hiding from other methods of detection?The tracers are certain molecules that release radiation. If they're inside a patient, a PET scanner can detect the radiation which lets you pinpoint the exact location it came from, thus where in the body the tracer is.
They make tracers that stick to specific molecules that exist inside humans that they are interested in finding. In the above case, the tracer 11C-DPA-713 sticks to a protein called TSPO that some cells have. If you inject the tracer, it sticks to the TSPO in the body, wherever it happens to be, and then lights up on the scanner images showing you where the TSPO is.
So the images are basically, where is the TSPO in each person, and how much is there.
And hopefully someone else can provide more detail about TSPO specifically, but just going by what she said in the symposium and research roadmap webinar, it's a molecule on a cell's mitochondria. Some of the cells that have the highest levels of it are glial cells and immune cells, maybe highest of all being microglia and macrophages but I'm not positive about that. So if you see a lot of TSPO in a certain location, that might mean there are lots of immune cells there for some reason.
Yeah, it's exciting! Much more practical than doing surgery every time you want to count a certain type of cell in hard to reach places.So could one conceivably make tracers for gamma delta t cells, gamma/type 1 interferons, or whatever other cells we might suspect are hiding from other methods of detection?
Just a little addendum—it tends to be induced in those cell types when they are in an “activated” state, which is more or less a big oversimplified dichotomy of macrophage phenotypic diversity. The idea is that higher TSPO expression tends to correlate with release of XYZ cytokines when, for example, macrophages are stimulated with LPS to model recognition of bacterial pathogens. So people use a TSPO signature to claim that those immune cells are reacting to a pathogen/there must be inflammation. But as I said earlier in the thread, it’s not always a safe assumption that if there’s smoke there’s fireAnd hopefully someone else can provide more detail about TSPO specifically, but just going by what she said in the symposium and research roadmap webinar, it's a molecule on a cell's mitochondria. Some of the cells that have the highest levels of it are glial cells and immune cells, maybe highest of all being microglia and macrophages but I'm not positive about that. So if you see a lot of TSPO in a certain location, that might mean there are lots of immune cells there for some reason.
Theoretically, but from the chatter I’ve heard, it can be practically impossible for some specific targets. The specifics for what makes it impossible in some cases are beyond me, though.So could one conceivably make tracers for gamma delta t cells, gamma/type 1 interferons, or whatever other cells we might suspect are hiding from other methods of detection?
Is that where you'd expect to find concentrations of those bone marrow cells? Or to put it a different way, are there areas of marrow you'd expect to light up that are missing?
Seeing the actual bar plots, I am not convinced this data presents a case for lymph node specificity.
Another random thought: odd that it didn't replicate for men.
Based on the bar plots I am guessing that there was probably a lot of variability across all the participants, so the two representative images might not be particularly representative
I would be interested in @SNT Gatchaman 's take on these pictures.
She also said people thought she was crazy to do full body scan and after her findings she was grateful she did since they saw such odd results.
I gather that whole body PET is rather new, so clinical interpretation is helpful to try and understand what the results actually mean for ME/CFS.
Just looked at them in Photoshop, and the missing bits are odd—must be some kind of artefact of the technique or the scanner? The ankles of the 50-year-old control are also missing on the 2D scan.
The PET scans sound really facinating, and I really hope they can be validated. A diagnostic scan would be gamechanging, even if it wasn't accessible in the clinic just yet.
The images that forestglip posted look like uptake within (or possibly around) skeletal muscle rather than the deeper lymphatics.
I don't think PET/MR has the spatial resolution to be showing small lymph nodes along with their lymphatic channels. With FDG PET/CT 5 mm metastatic nodes will certainly light up, but this is a different scenario where we're trying to assess a more diffuse uptake pattern of lower level avidity.
Am I right in thinking that the standard MRI scans that some PwME will have had for other reasons will be useless without this specific tracer?
how much tissue is between the origin and the detector that might be reducing the signal you're eventually seeing