Following delivery of technetium 99m-labeled aerosols through a ventilator
circuit, the amount of radioactivity in the lungs of 58 ventilated rabbits
was estimated first by gamma scintigraphy via gamma camera and later by dir
ect counting of the excised lungs (n = 116 specimens) with a gamma counter.
The in situ radioactivity measured via scintigraphy was closely correlated
with the gamma counter ex vivo tissue counts of the radioactivity (R-2 = 0
.997, P < 0.001). Overall, gamma scintigraphy gave slightly lower values of
activity than the tissue counts from the gamma counter, but the limits of
agreement between the two measurements were narrow enough for us to conside
r that the tissue and scintigraphy methods were in agreement. We conclude t
hat gamma scintigraphy provides a convenient and noninvasive means for the
accurate estimation of aerosol deposition in the lungs of small animals and
possibly in small infants.