Bone scan + DEXA scan

 

Bone scan

When a breast cancer has been diagnosed, some people have a bone scan to stage the breast cancer.
Staging tells the doctor how big a cancer is and whether it has spread. Knowing the stage helps your doctor decide which treatment you need.
You might have a bone scan if:
  • there are cancer cells in the lymph nodes under your arm (axilla)
  • you have a larger breast cancer, for example bigger than 5 cm
  • you have specific symptoms, for example bone pain

What is a bone scan?

A bone scan shows up changes or abnormalities in the bones. It is also called:
  • a radionuclide scan
  • bone scintigraphy
  • nuclear medicine bone scan
A bone scan can look at a particular joint or bone. In cancer it is more usual to scan the whole body.
A large camera (called a gamma camera) scans you and picks up radioactivity.
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You have the scan in either the medical physics, nuclear medicine or x-ray department at the hospital. The scan can take between 30 to 60 minutes, but you'll be at the hospital for several hours.
If there are changes on the scan they may be called hot spots. These are not always cancer. Bone changes can happen for other reasons like arthritis. You might need to have a CT scan to know exactly where these abnormal areas are.

Preparing for your bone scan

You can eat and drink normally before your scan. Take your medicines as normal unless your doctor tells you otherwise.
Phone the department where you are having the scan if you are pregnant or breastfeeding. You might have to stop breastfeeding for a short period of time after having the scan. So you might want to store enough expressed milk for 1 or 2 feeds beforehand. The staff at the department will advise you.
You have to arrive at the hospital about 4 hours before your scan. Your appointment letter will tell you the exact time.
Tell the department beforehand if you have difficulties passing urine, need to pass urine urgently, or have prostate related problems.

What happens

First, a technician gives you an injection of a radioactive liquid called a radionucleotide.
They inject it through a small tube into your bloodstream. It’s a very small amount and doesn’t harm you.
The injection might make you feel hot and flushed for a minute or two but this is normal. You might have a quick test scan immediately after the injection.
You wait for about 4 hours while the radioactive liquid travels through the blood and collects in your bones. It tends to collect more in areas where the bone is breaking down and repairing itself. These areas of activity or ‘hot-spots’ show up on the scan.
They look darker than other areas of bone.
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Waiting for the scan
Your radiographer will ask you to drink plenty of fluids while you wait for your scan. This flushes the radionucleotide round your system well.
You might be able to walk in the hospital grounds while you are waiting. Or you might need to wait in a separate area with other people having nuclear medicine tests. You might need to use specific labelled toilets.
The radiographer will ask you to pass urine just before your scan. This gets rid of any radionucleotide in your bladder, so it doesn’t interfere with your scan.
Having the bone scan
When you go back to the scanning room your radiographer might ask you to wear a hospital gown. Or you might wear your own clothes but need to empty your pockets of metal objects such as coins or keys.
You lie down on an x-ray couch and need to keep still. The camera then takes pictures of the bones in your whole body (skeleton). Your body goes through the scanner. Let your radiographer know beforehand if you think this will be a problem for you. Tell them if you start to feel claustrophobic. They will reassure you if you feel nervous.
The scan can take up to an hour.

After your bone scan

You should be able to go home soon after the scan. You need to drink plenty for the rest of the day to help flush the radioactive tracer out of your body. Your body gets rid of it through the urine, usually within 24 hours.
A very small amount of radioactive tracer is left in your body for a short time after your scan. So for the rest of the day keep any time you spend within arm's length of pregnant women, babies or young children as short as possible.

Getting your results

You should get your results within 1 or 2 weeks at a follow up appointment.
Waiting for test results can be a very worrying time. You might have contact details for a specialist nurse who you can contact for information if you need to. It can help to talk to a close friend or relative about how you feel.
You can also contact the Cancer Research UK nurses on freephone 0808 800 4040 for information and support. The lines are open from 9am to 5pm, Monday to Friday.
Contact the doctor who arranged the test if you haven’t heard anything after a couple of weeks.

Possible risks

A bone scan is a safe test for most people but like all medical tests there are possible risks. Your doctor and radiographer make sure the benefits of having the test outweigh these risks.

Bruising and swelling

You might get a small bruise around the area where they put the needle in.
There's is a risk that the radioactive tracer will leak outside the vein. This can cause swelling and pain in your arm but it's rare and gets better quickly.

Pregnancy

Contact the department if you are due to have a bone scan and you are pregnant or breastfeeding. The staff will tell you if you need to stop breastfeeding for a time after having the radioactive tracer.
You might not be able to have a bone scan if there is a possibility that you might be pregnant. This is because the radioactive tracer could affect the developing baby.

Radiation

Exposure to radiation during a bone scan can slightly increase your risk of developing cancer in the future. Talk to your doctor or radiographer if this worries you.
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................................................................. DEXA SCAN

Bone density scan (DEXA scan)ContentsOverviewWhen it is usedHow it is performed
A bone density scan uses low dose X-rays to see how dense (or strong) your bones are. You may also hear it called a DEXA scan.
Bone density scans are often used to diagnose or assess your risk of osteoporosis, a health condition that weakens bones and makes them more likely to break.
As well as being quick and painless, a bone density scan is more effective than normal X-rays in identifying low bone density.

Who needs to have a bone density scan

You may need to have a bone density scan if you're:
  • over 50 with a risk of developing osteoporosis
  • under 50 with other risk factors, such as smoking or a previous broken bone
The results from a bone density scan are usually used alongside a fracture risk assessment to assess your chances of osteoporosis and breaking a bone.
Osteoporosis can affect anyone at any age, although older postmenopausal women are particularly at risk.
This is because the level of oestrogen declines after the menopause, resulting in a decrease in bone density.
The more dense your bones, the stronger and less likely they are to break (fracture). Osteoporosis does not cause any symptoms until a bone is broken.

Measuring bone density

During a bone density scan, a special type of X-ray called dual energy X-ray absorptiometry is passed through your body. This is shortened to DEXA.
Some radiation is absorbed by the bone and soft tissue, and some travels through your body.
Special detectors in the DEXA machine measure how much radiation passes through your bones, and this information is sent to a computer.
Your bone density measurements will be compared with the bone density of a young healthy adult or an adult of your own age, gender and ethnicity.

How safe are bone density (DEXA) scans

Bone density scans are very safe. They use a much lower level of radiation than standard X-rays, which means that the radiographer (the technical specialist carrying out the scan) can stay in the scanning room with you during the scan.
The amount of radiation used during a bone density scan is very low and less than 2 days' exposure to natural background radiation (NBR).
By comparison, a chest X-ray uses the equivalent of about 3 days' exposure to NBR, and a flight to North America is equivalent to approximately a week's exposure to NBR.
Despite being very safe, bone density scans and X-rays are not recommended for pregnant women, as X-rays can damage an unborn child.
 
 
When it is used-Bone density scan (DEXA scan)ContentsOverviewWhen it is usedHow it is performed
Bone density scans, also known as DEXA scans, help to work out your risk of breaking a bone.
They're often used to help diagnose bone-related health problems, such as osteoporosis, or to assess the risk of getting them.
Total body bone density scans can also be used to measure the amount of bone, fat and muscle in the body.
This type of scan is routinely used in children, but is only used as part of a research study in adults.

Identifying bone problems

Unlike ordinary X-rays, DEXA scans can measure tiny reductions in bone density.
This makes it possible to diagnose osteoporosis in its early stages, before you break a bone.
A DEXA scan also uses a low dose of radiation, which means the risks to health are much lower than with standard X-rays.
Doctors use the results of bone density scans to help them decide whether treatment for low bone density is needed.
This may include making lifestyle changes to help improve your bone health, such as:
  • regularly doing weight-bearing exercise, such as walking or running

When a bone density scan is recommended

A DEXA scan may be recommended if you have an increased risk of developing a bone problem like osteoporosis.
Your risk is increased if you:
  • have had a broken bone after a minor fall or injury
  • have a health condition, such as arthritis, that can lead to low bone density
  • have been taking medicines called oral glucocorticoids for 3 months or more – glucocorticoids are used to treat inflammation, but can also cause weakened bones
  • are a woman and have large gaps between periods (more than a year)

Limitations

A DEXA scan is not the only way of measuring bone strength. Other risk factors, such as family history and certain medicines, help to work out if you're at risk of breaking a bone.
All of the risk factors need to be considered before you have a bone density scan or start treatment.
Some people need a bone density scan to confirm that their risk of breaking a bone is high enough to need treatment.
For others, particularly older people over the age of 75, the risk of breaking a bone may be so high that there's no need for them to have a bone density scan before treatment is prescribed.
Interpreting the results of a bone density scan can sometimes be difficult.
For example, it may not be easy to interpret the results of a scan of the spine when someone has a degenerative condition, such as osteoarthritis of the spine (spondylosis).
Sometimes spinal abnormalities or a previous spinal fracture can give a false result.
A bone density scan will not show whether low bone mineral density is caused by too little bone (osteoporosis) or too little calcium in the bone, usually because of a lack of vitamin D (osteomalacia).
How it is performed-Bone density scan (DEXA scan)ContentsOverviewWhen it is usedHow it is performed
A bone density scan is a quick and painless procedure that involves lying on your back on an X-ray table so an area of your body can be scanned.
No special preparations are needed.
You may be able to remain fully clothed, depending on the area of your body being scanned.
But you'll need to remove any clothes that have metal fasteners, such as zips, hooks or buckles. In some cases, you may need to wear a gown.

The bone density scan

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When you have a DEXA scan, you will not need to go into a tunnel or have an injection.
Instead, you lie on your back on a flat, open X-ray table. You'll need to keep very still during the scan so the images are not blurred.
The scan will usually be carried out by a radiographer, a specialist in taking X-ray images.
During the scan, a large scanning arm will be passed over your body to measure bone density in the centre of the skeleton.
As the scanning arm is moved slowly over your body, a narrow beam of low-dose X-rays will be passed through the part of your body being examined.
This will usually be your hip and lower spine to check for weak bones (osteoporosis).
But as bone density varies in different parts of the skeleton, more than one part of your body may be scanned.
The forearm may be scanned for certain health problems, such as hyperparathyroidism, or if scans are not possible in the hip or spine.
Some of the X-rays that are passed through your body will be absorbed by tissue, such as fat and bone.
An X-ray detector inside the scanning arm measures the amount of X-rays that have passed through your body.
This information will be used to produce an image of the scanned area.
The scan usually takes 10 to 20 minutes. You'll be able to go home after you have had it done.

Your results

A bone density scan compares your bone density with the bone density expected for a young healthy adult or a healthy adult of your own age, gender and ethnicity.
The difference is calculated as a standard deviation (SD) score. This measures the difference between your bone density and the expected value.
The difference between your measurement and that of a young healthy adult is known as a T score,
The difference between your measurement and that of someone of the same age is known as a Z score.
The World Health Organization (WHO) classifies T scores as follows:
  • above -1 SD is normal
  • between -1 and -2.5 SD is defined as mildly reduced bone mineral density (BMD) compared with peak bone mass (PBM)
  • at or below -2.5 SD is defined as osteoporosis
If your Z score is below -2, your bone density is lower than it should be for someone of your age.
Although BMD results provide a good indication of bone strength, the results of a bone density scan will not necessarily predict whether you'll get a fracture.
For example, someone with low bone density may never break a bone, whereas someone with average bone density may have several fractures.
This is because other factors, such as age, sex or whether you have previously had a fall, also determine if you're likely to sustain a fracture.
Your doctor will consider all of your individual risk factors before deciding if treatment is necessary.

ALL THESE INVESTIGATIONS ARE QUITE IMPORTANT IF THEY HAVE THE POWER TO CHANGE THE MANAGEMENT PLAN!!!!