Hi all,
My purpose for posting the article about the Gadolinium Contrast Agent was not to alarm or scare anyone away from it's use. Like any other medical procedure or medication there are side effects that medical personnel take great care in mentioning (in some cases, ad nauseum until it sounds like you could have all sorts of ill effects when in most likelihood, the actual threat is probably minimal).
And the clarity of the MRI image may be ultra important (for example, when it is used to prepare the computer program for the Gamma Knife or Cyber Knife procedures, which require as much detail as possible) and the question as to whether a Gad Agent should be used or not is a moot point.
Clearly though, the agent can have serious medical effects when administered to a patient with renal problems or failures, and the FDA has required a warning label regarding the use in this situation since around 2006. And that is why we are now asked if we are suffering from any forms of renal failure before an MRI with the Gad Agent is administered.
So what about the use of the agent in periodic MRI's for those of us on the W & W or other longer term monitoring programs? Should we be using the Gad agent or just a normal MRI?
My own personal opinion is that it is a good question to ask your medical professionals. I think, at the very least, we should ask who the maker of the Gad agent is, and ask if there are any other products that do not appear to leave a Gad residue in the brain or other neuron cells.
ANA guy has asked for a link to the article I read on the computer. Unfortunately, it was one of those articles that just "pop up" on the main web page (I believe I was using Yahoo at the time) but that "disappears" after a few hours or so. I wish I had been smart enough to notice the publication or to add the article to my favorites, but alas, I didn't do it and now everything is based on my memory of the article.
However, there are many other articles about the use and side effects of the use of Gad Agents and here is a link to just one of them. I think you will have to copy and paste it into your browser to read it but that is a fairly simple procedure.
http://www.healthimaging.com/topics/molecular-imaging/neuroimaging/contrast-concerns-gadolinium-deposits-remain-brain-after-contrast-enhanced-mriAs CHD63 has posted, the benefits of the Gad Agent may far outweigh any residual side effects from it's use. As in all things medical, it is your body and your decision about what to do about your treatment.
And, as she correctly pointed out, there have been no studies as to the actual effect of the Gad product even if it is residual in the certain brain regions.
I just think it a good question to ask the medical team that is treating you. Then make your own decision based on what they tell you.
Rod