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AJR 2002; 179:495-502
© American Roentgen Ray Society


Pictorial Essay

Hyperfunctioning Parathyroid Tissue: Spectrum of Appearances on Noninvasive Imaging

Michael B. Gotway1,2, Jessica W. T. Leung3, Gretchen A. Gooding4, Harold I. Litt2, Gautham P. Reddy2, Eugene T. Morita2, W. Richard Webb2, Orlo H. Clark5 and Charles B. Higgins2

1 Department of Radiology, San Francisco General Hospital, Rm. 1x 55A, Box 1325, 1001 Potrero Ave., San Francisco, CA 94110.
2 Department of Radiology, University of California, Rm. M-391, 505 Parnassus Ave., San Francisco, CA 94143.
3 Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, 75 Francis St., Boston, MA 02115.
4 Department of Radiology, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 4150 Clement St., San Francisco, CA 94121.
5 Department of Surgery, University of California, Mt. Zion Hospital, Box 1674 C347, Surgery Faculty Practice, 2330 Post St., Rm. 420, San Francisco, CA 94115.

Received January 4, 2002; accepted after revision February 13, 2002.

 
Address correspondence to M. B. Gotway.


Introduction
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Introduction
Anatomy
Sonography
CT
Scintigraphy
MR Imaging
References
 
Hyperparathyroidism is a common clinical condition most often caused by single or multiple adenomas and less commonly by gland hyperplasia; parathyroid carcinoma is a rare cause of hyperparathyroidism. Experienced surgeons may cure 95% of patients with hyperparathyroidism without the need for imaging guidance [1]. When hyperparathyroidism recurs or persists after surgery, surgical cure rates fall to 60% if imaging guidance is not used. Noninvasive methods used to evaluate patients with hyperparathyroidism include sonography, CT, scintigraphy, and MR imaging. A single cross-sectional study may be used to localize the side of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue before cervical exploration for patients initially diagnosed with hyperparathyroidism. For patients with recurrent or persistent hyperparathyroidism, a combination of noninvasive imaging methods, often an anatomic method such as MR imaging and a functional method such as 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy, are used. Familiarity with the various imaging appearances of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue is required for an accurate diagnosis.


Anatomy
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Introduction
Anatomy
Sonography
CT
Scintigraphy
MR Imaging
References
 
Parathyroid glands, commonly four in number, are usually located near the posterior aspect of the thyroid gland. The superior parathyroid glands may be ectopically located in the thyroid gland, the posterior mediastinum, the carotid sheath, or adjacent to the esophagus. Ectopic inferior parathyroid tissue is usually found in the thymus [2].


Sonography
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Introduction
Anatomy
Sonography
CT
Scintigraphy
MR Imaging
References
 
Parathyroid glands should be scanned using a high-resolution linear transducer (>=10-MHz) to achieve maximal spatial resolution. A lower frequency transducer may occasionally be used to achieve a greater depth of penetration (Fig. 1A,1B,1C).



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Fig. 1A. 50-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Longitudinal sonogram obtained with 15-MHz linear transducer shows no evidence of abnormal parathyroid tissue. T = thyroid gland.

 


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Fig. 1B. 50-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Longitudinal sonogram obtained with 6-MHz linear transducer shows deeper tissue penetration than revealed in A. Note hypoechoic focus (cursors) with poor sound transmission, consistent with parathyroid adenoma. Although sonographic evaluation of patients with hyperparathyroidism generally requires use of high-frequency (7- to 15-MHz) linear transducers to achieve maximal spatial resolution, care is required to visualize posterior aspects of thyroid gland, thereby ensuring that most common position for abnormal parathyroid tissue is evaluated.

 


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Fig. 1C. 50-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Color Doppler sonogram shows vascularity in lesion (arrow).

 

Abnormal parathyroid tissue is usually hypoechoic or anechoic relative to the thyroid tissue, without sound transmission, and closely related to the posterior aspect of the thyroid gland. Areas of increased echogenicity may be encountered in larger abnormal parathyroid glands (Fig. 2). When abnormal parathyroid glands exceed 1 cm, color and power Doppler sonography may reveal vascularity in the lesion (Fig. 3A,3B), particularly in parathyroid carcinomas (Fig. 4).



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Fig. 2. 54-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Longitudinal sonogram (7-MHz linear transducer) shows mass (large arrows) with mixed hypoechoic and hyperechoic foci (small arrows), representing parathyroid adenoma. Hyperechoic foci may occasionally be encountered in larger adenomas.

 


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Fig. 3A. 45-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Gray-scale sonogram (8-MHz linear transducer) reveals hypoechoic lesion (cursors) in neck with no sound transmission, consistent with parathyroid adenoma.

 


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Fig. 3B. 45-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Color Doppler sonogram reveals vascularity in lesion (arrow).

 


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Fig. 4. 62-year-old man with parathyroid carcinoma. Transverse color Doppler sonogram (8-MHz linear transducer) of neck reveals hypoechoic nodule (arrows) with poor sound transmission and extensive vascularity.

 

The accuracy of sonography for the detection of abnormal parathyroid tissue, in patients who underwent surgery and in those who did not, ranges from 34% to 83% [2]. This sensitivity diminishes in patients with secondary hyperparathyroidism and recurrent or persistent hyperparathyroidism because of the higher frequency of hyperplastic glands (as opposed to adenomas) in the former and the higher prevalence of ectopic adenomas in the latter.


CT
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Patients undergoing CT for the evaluation of hyperparathyroidism should be scanned volumetrically with a thin-section technique after IV contrast administration.

Abnormal parathyroid glands enhance intensely after contrast administration. The CT diagnosis of abnormal parathyroid tissue requires identification of an enhancing nodule in locations characteristic for hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands, such as posterior to the thyroid gland (Fig. 5).



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Fig. 5. 45-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism. Contrast-enhanced axial CT scan (collimation, 5 mm; window width, 440 H; level, 40 H) reveals large, intensely enhancing nodule just posterior to inferior aspect of right thyroid gland (arrow), consistent with parathyroid adenoma.

 

CT sensitivity for the detection of abnormal parathyroid tissue ranges from 46% to 87% [2].


Scintigraphy
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Scintigraphy
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Scintigraphic methods for the evaluation of patients with hyperparathyroidism include 201TI chloride-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction scintigraphy and 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy, with or without 123I or 99mTc pertechnetate subtraction. 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy has nearly supplanted other techniques as the primary scintigraphic method used for the preoperative localization of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue.

201TI chloride is concentrated by both thyroid and parathyroid glands, whereas 99mTc pertechnetate is concentrated only by the thyroid gland. Therefore, if both agents are administered and the 99mTc pertechnetate images are subtracted from the 201TI chloride images, the remaining activity should be localized to parathyroid tissue. Because iodine, like 99mTc pertechnetate, selectively concentrates in the thyroid gland, orally administered 123I may also be used to obtain subtraction images.

99mTc sestamibi is initially concentrated in the thyroid gland and abnormal parathyroid tissue and then differentially cleared from these organs in a time-dependent manner, washing out of the thyroid more rapidly than abnormal parathyroid tissue. The differential clearance of 99mTc sestamibi allows dual-phase 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy to selectively image hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue.

Hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue appears as a focal area of increased tracer uptake on the 201Tl portion of a 201Tl-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction study (Figs. 6A and 6B). Similarly, hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands appear as foci of increased tracer uptake on 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy (Figs. 6C and 6D). Abnormal parathyroid tissue may be rendered more conspicuous using 123I subtraction (Figs. 7A,7B and 8) or by performing delayed imaging several hours after tracer administration (Fig. 6D).



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Fig. 6A. 201Tl-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction scintigrams in 61-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Planar scintigram after IV injection of 2 µCi (74 MBq) 201Tl shows tracer uptake in thyroid gland and small nodular focus of tracer uptake along inferior border of right lobe of thyroid gland (arrow), representing parathyroid adenoma.

 


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Fig. 6B. 201Tl-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction scintigrams in 61-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Planar scintigram after IV injection of 10 µCi (370 MBq) 99mTc pertechnetate shows normal distribution of tracer in thyroid gland. Note that focus of tracer uptake in A is not present on 99mTc pertechnetate portion of examination.

 


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Fig. 6C. 201Tl-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction scintigrams in 61-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Early (20-min) planar scintigram after IV injection of 26 µCi (962 MBq) of 99mTc sestamibi shows focus of activity localized to inferior aspect of right lobe of thyroid gland, representing parathyroid adenoma (arrow).

 


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Fig. 6D. 201Tl-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction scintigrams in 61-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Delayed (2-hr) planar scintigram shows relatively improved conspicuity of parathyroid adenoma (arrow) compared with C. Note improved resolution of 99mTc sestamibi scintigram compared with A. Improved resolution, because of more favorable energy of 99mTc photons, is one advantage 99mTc sestamibi has compared with 201Tl imaging.

 


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Fig. 7A. 99mTc sestamibi-123I subtraction scintigraphy in 58-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Planar scintigram obtained 20 min after IV injection of 25 µCi (925 MBq) 99mTc sestamibi reveals focus of tracer uptake just cranial to superior aspect of left lobe of thyroid gland (arrow), consistent with parathyroid adenoma.

 


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Fig. 7B. 99mTc sestamibi-123I subtraction scintigraphy in 58-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Planar scintigram after subtraction of 123I portion of study. 123I localizes in thyroid gland and not within hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue; therefore, 123I subtraction removes tracer activity in thyroid gland, increasing conspicuity of abnormal parathyroid tissue (arrow) cranial to superior aspect of left lobe of thyroid gland. Photopenic area in center of image represents subtracted thyroid tissue activity. Similar subtraction techniques may be performed using pertechnetate in place of 123I. (Courtesy of Newberg A, Philadelphia, PA)

 


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Fig. 8. 99mTc sestamibi-123I subtraction scintigram in 45-year-old woman with hyperparathyroidism. Planar image obtained after subtraction of 123I portion of study reveals focus of increased tracer uptake (large arrow) along inferior aspect of left lower portion of photopenic area, representing subtracted thyroid gland activity, consistent with parathyroid adenoma. Tracer uptake at superior aspect of image (small arrows) represents salivary tissue. (Courtesy of Newberg A, Philadelphia, PA)

 

The sensitivity of 201T1-99mTc pertechnetate subtraction scintigraphy ranges from 60% to 87%; accuracy for mediastinal ectopic glands is about 70% [2, 3]. Accuracy rates for 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy for abnormal parathyroid gland detection, particularly with the use of single-photon emission tomography, exceed 90% [2, 4, 5]. 99mTc sestamibi scintigraphy is also accurate for the detection of mediastinal parathyroid adenomas [2].


MR Imaging
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Introduction
Anatomy
Sonography
CT
Scintigraphy
MR Imaging
References
 
The MR imaging technique for the evaluation of patients with hyperparathyroidism requires thin-section ECG-gated or peripherally gated imaging of the neck with a phased array coil. Chest imaging is also performed using a torso coil. T1-weighted images, unenhanced and contrast-enhanced (with fat saturation), are obtained in the neck and chest. Fast spin-echo T2-weighted images, with or without fat saturation, are obtained in the neck [2].

The most common appearance of hyper-functioning parathyroid glands on MR imaging is isointense-to-low signal intensity on T1-weighted images and high signal intensity on T2-weighted images, with intense contrast enhancement (Fig. 9A,9B,9C). Correct diagnosis depends on showing that the suspected lesion resides in a location typical for hyperfunctioning parathyroid glands [2, 6]. Occasionally, high signal intensity may be encountered on T1- and T2-weighted images, reflecting gland hemorrhage or cystic components (Figs. 10A,10B,10C and 11A,11B). Low signal intensity may rarely be seen on both sequences, indicating fibrosis, old hemorrhage, and cellular degeneration. The signal pattern of the abnormal parathyroid tissue has been shown to correlate with the histologic characteristics of the abnormal glands [7]. MR imaging accurately detects ectopic hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue [8] (Figs. 10A,10B,10C,11A,11B,12A,12B,12C,13A,13B,13C,14).



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Fig. 9A. 45-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Axial T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE, 500/8) obtained through lower neck reveals nodule (arrow) just caudal to right lobe of thyroid gland that is slightly hypointense relative to skeletal muscle. Location and appearance are typical of parathyroid adenoma.

 


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Fig. 9B. 45-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Axial fast spin-echo T2-weighted MR image (4000/105) at same level as A shows lesion (arrow) is hyperintense relative to skeletal muscle, also characteristic of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue.

 


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Fig. 9C. 45-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Enhanced axial T1-weighted fat-saturated MR image (500/8) reveals that lesion (arrow) enhances brightly. Intense enhancement is typical of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue. (Reprinted with permission from [2])

 


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Fig. 10A. 55-year-old woman with renal disease and hyperparathyroidism. Axial T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE, 500/8) shows nodule (arrow) with signal intensity slightly greater than adjacent skeletal muscle in left sternocleidomastoid muscle. Increased signal intensity on T1-weighted MR image is somewhat unusual for hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue.

 


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Fig. 10B. 55-year-old woman with renal disease and hyperparathyroidism. Axial fast spin-echo T2-weighted MR image (4000/105) shows nodule (arrow) has markedly increased T2 signal intensity compared with adjacent skeletal muscle.

 


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Fig. 10C. 55-year-old woman with renal disease and hyperparathyroidism. Enhanced axial T1-weighted fat-saturated MR image (500/8) reveals intense enhancement of nodule (arrow). (Reprinted with permission from [6])

 


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Fig. 11A. 85-year-old woman with recurrent hyperparathyroidism. Axial T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE, 500/8) obtained through upper mediastinum shows right paratracheal mass (arrow) with mildly increased T1 signal.

 


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Fig. 11B. 85-year-old woman with recurrent hyperparathyroidism. Axial T2-weighted MR image (4000/90) shows hyperintense T2 signal in nodule (arrow). Combination of hyperintense T1 and T2 signals suggests that lesion is cystic. Cystic parathyroid adenoma was proven at surgery. (Reprinted with permission from [8])

 


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Fig. 12A. 61-year-old woman with persistent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. e = esophagus. Axial T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE, 550/8) obtained through lower neck reveals isointense nodule (arrow) immediately posterior to esophagus.

 


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Fig. 12B. 61-year-old woman with persistent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. e = esophagus. Axial fast spin-echo T2-weighted MR image (4000/90) reveals nodule (arrow) is hyperintense. Note thin rim of low-signal-intensity tissue surrounding lesion, characteristic of parathyroid adenomas.

 


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Fig. 12C. 61-year-old woman with persistent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. e = esophagus. Enhanced axial T1-weighted fat-saturated MR image (550/8) shows nodule (arrow) enhances intensely. Signal intensity patterns are characteristic of parathyroid adenoma. Paraesophageal position is recognized, but uncommon ectopic location. (Reprinted with permission from [2])

 


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Fig. 13A. 36-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Axial T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE, 500/8) obtained through upper neck reveals iso- to low-intensity nodule (arrow) in left retropharyngeal space.

 


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Fig. 13B. 36-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Axial fast spin-echo T2-weighted MR image (4000/90) shows increased T2 signal intensity (arrow) in lesion.

 


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Fig. 13C. 36-year-old man with recurrent hyperparathyroidism after cervical exploration. Enhanced axial T1-weighted fat-saturated MR image (500/8) shows intense enhancement of nodule (arrow), characteristic of parathyroid adenoma. (Reprinted with permission from [6])

 


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Fig. 14. 50-year-old man with hyperparathyroidism. Coronal T1-weighted MR image (TR/TE, 500/8) shows slightly hyperintense nodule in aortopulmonary window (arrow), surgically proven to represent parathyroid adenoma.

 

The sensitivity of MR imaging for the detection of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue in patients who were operated on and in those who were not ranges from 50% to 88% [2, 6].

In conclusion, correct localization of hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue improves surgical efficiency but requires familiarity with the imaging appearances of abnormal parathyroid glands and knowledge of the typical positions of normally located and ectopic hyperfunctioning parathyroid tissue.


References
Top
Introduction
Anatomy
Sonography
CT
Scintigraphy
MR Imaging
References
 

  1. Satava RM Jr, Beahrs OH, Scholz DA. Success rate of cervical exploration for hyperparathyroidism. Arch Surg 1975;110:625 -628[Abstract]
  2. Gotway MB, Higgins CB. MR imaging of the thyroid and parathyroid glands. Magn Reson Imaging Clin N Am 2000;8:163 -182[Medline]
  3. Krubsack AJ, Wilson SD, Lawson TL, et al. Prospective comparison of radionuclide, computed tomographic, sonographic, and magnetic resonance localization of parathyroid tumors. Surgery 1989;106:639 -644[Medline]
  4. Moinuddin M, Whynott C. Ectopic parathyroid adenomas: multi-imaging modalities and its management. Clin Nucl Med 1996;21:27 -32[Medline]
  5. Neumann DR, Esselstyn CB Jr, Madera AM. Sestamibi/iodine subtraction single photon emission computed tomography in reoperative secondary hyperparathyroidism. Surgery 2000;128:22 -28[Medline]
  6. Gotway MB, Reddy GP, Webb WR, Morita ET, Clark OH, Higgins CB. Comparison between MR imaging and 99mTc MIBI scintigraphy in the evaluation of recurrent of persistent hyperparathyroidism. Radiology 2001;218:783 -790[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Auffermann W, Guis M, Tavares NJ, Clark OH, Higgins CB. MR signal intensity of parathyroid adenomas: correlation with histopathology. AJR 1989;153:873 -876[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  8. Santos E, Higgins CB, Clark O. Recurrent hyperparathyroidism caused by a parathyroid cystic adenoma: localization by MRI. J Comput Assist Tomogr 1996;20:996 -998[Medline]

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