key: cord-0871735-vs5ponal authors: Monaco, Lavinia; Crivellaro, Cinzia; Cressoni, Massimo; Foti, Giuseppe; Landoni, Claudio; Messa, Cristina; Guerra, Luca title: The heterogeneity of lung perfusion patterns in SPECT/CT during COVID-19: not only embolism date: 2021-05-05 journal: Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging DOI: 10.1007/s00259-021-05377-1 sha: 41711bea9733062c65e77efc9690a4894e455048 doc_id: 871735 cord_uid: vs5ponal nan We read with great interest the manuscript of Das et al. about the role of perfusion SPECT/CT in the detection of pulmonary embolism (PE) in COVID-19 patients with moderate/high probability of PE [1] . Although this kind of studies generally employs a combined ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) approach to assess the presence of pulmonary embolism, during the COVID-19 pandemic safety concerns led to discordant opinions on the "routine" V/Q protocols [2] and only recently some societies suggested the possibility to integrate ventilation in specific and selected circumstances [3] . However, the experience of Das et al. well demonstrated how even the perfusion alone could play a possible role in the study of these complex and delicate cases [1] . Indeed, one of the main complications of COVID-19 is related to diffuse and localized thromboembolic events, particularly involving the pulmonary microcirculation, and functional perfusion studies coupled with CT images (SPECT/CT) can significantly help in the prompt detection of these cases. Moreover, it can eventually shed light on the peculiar phenotype described in the routine practice, characterized by severe hypoxemia with relatively preserved lungs at CT, the socalled happy hypoxic state [4] . The previous employment of other perfusion techniques (e.g., dual-energy CT) showed peculiar vasodilation phenomena without embolic defects in consolidated lungs during COVID-19 pneumonia [5] . This stressed on one hand the need for functional studies, suggesting possible interpretative keys for the already mentioned "happy hypoxic" patients, and on the other hand supporting the putative role of more safe and "infection-free" procedures, as the perfusion-only studies. In our experience of primary center facing the different phases of the pandemic in Italy, the Nuclear Medicine Unit of ASST Monza approached this urgent issue by the employment of perfusion SPECT/CT with 99mTc-macroaggregated albumin (MAA), offering the opportunity to measure the regional lung perfusion without aerosolization risks. Interestingly, in our series, two anecdotal cases demonstrated segmental perfusion defects with normal parenchyma at CT images (Fig. 1, panel a) , eventually associated with focal areas of increased perfusion in consolidated and hypoventilated lung regions (Fig. 1, panel b) . These functional and morphological modifications could help in the detection of suspected pulmonary embolisms, as well as in the definition of functional and radiological modifications that can partly explain the happy hypoxic phenomenon. Finally, SPECT/CT findings confirm the evidence of an increased perfusion around areas of lung consolidation [5] , contributing to depicting the great heterogeneity of functional imaging patterns in COVID-19 pneumonia [6] , that partly explain the "atypical" presentations of these specific cases of acute respiratory distress syndromes (ARDS). These observations stress the putative role of perfusion SPECT/CT in shedding light on the physio-pathogenesis of microvascular dysfunction in COVID-19, eventually helping in the detection of patients with worse outcome. Publisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Fig. 1 Axial MAA-lung perfusion SPECT/TC. A 57-year-old male patient admitted to our hospital with ARDS due to bilateral SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia. MAAlung perfusion SPECT/TC confirmed the pulmonary embolism (elevated D-dimer and clinical symptoms), showing segmental baso-lateral perfusion defect of the right lower lobe, that was normally aerated at CT images (asterisk; panel a). In the second patient, a 48-year-old male admitted for the same reasons, SPECT/CT lung perfusion showed an increased perfusion in consolidated or hypoventilated lung regions compared to the normally inflated ones (panel b) Clinical utility of perfusion (Q)-singlephoton emission computed tomography (SPECT)/CT for diagnosing pulmonary embolus (PE) in COVID-19 patients with a moderate to high pre-test probability of PE SNMMI Updates Statement on COVID-19, Ventilation/Perfusion (V/Q) Lung Studies The pathophysiology of "happy" hypoxemia in COVID-19 Hypoxaemia related to COVID-19: vascular and perfusion abnormalities on dual-energy CT Ventilation/perfusion SPECT/CT findings in different lung lesions associated with COVID-19: a case series