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Definitions
Nuclear Medicine
Over the last century, medical technology has exploded in an unprecedented
wave. The average human life span has increased due to this technological explosion
and medical conditions that had previously been considered untreatable are now
easily remedied. Due to these medical innovations, early diagnosis of diseases
have increased exponentially and the appropriate treatments to these diseases
are becoming easier and easier.
One of the most important medical innovations of recent years is Nuclear Medicine.
Although the word nuclear has a number of negative connotations, nuclear medicine
simply utilizes radioactive substances as an instrument that images the body
and treats disease. Whereas in the past, exploratory surgery was the most common
method for doctors to look inside the body, nuclear medical techniques allow
doctors to examine the insides of the human body in a non-invasive manner. Nuclear
medical techniques derive information from both the physiology (function) of
the body as well as the body’s anatomy to establish both a diagnosis and the
appropriate treatment.
Although the medical use of nuclear technology can be traced back to as early
as 1895 when Wilhelm Roentgen discovered x-rays, nuclear medicine has only gained
prominence in the mid-20th century. In the 1930s, the use of nuclear technology
in medicine increased with the development of the Cyclotron and Fission Reaction,
a device capable of splitting atoms into radioactive materials. Despite these
innovations, nuclear medical materials only became widespread during the 1950s
as the development of scanners that traced the distribution of radioactive materials
in the body soon paved the way for the development of radiopharmaceuticals (radioactive
tracers). Within nuclear medicine, radiopharmaceuticals are given to a patient
and will travel to the target organs and tissues. The radiopharmaceuticals give
off gamma rays that are detected through the use of special cameras. These images
of the targeted organs and tissues form the basis of the nuclear medical physician’s
diagnosis and recommended treatment.
As nuclear medicine has evolved, the number of radiopharmaceuticals has increased,
thus allowing this technology to be used on a variety of body functions. Consequently,
nuclear medicine has moved from in its initial use of solely treating to thyroid
disease to incorporate such useful medical applications as:
- Analyzing kidney function
- Imaging blood flow and heart function
- Scanning for respiratory and blood-flow problems in the lungs
- Identifying gallbladder blockage
- Evaluating bones for arthritis, fracture, infection or tumor
- Determining the presence or spread of cancer
- Identifying bowel bleeding
- Locating infection presence
- Measuring thyroid function to detect irregularities such as an overactive
or underactive thyroid.
Positron Emission Tomography
As nuclear medical technology has advanced in the last half-century, it has
paved the way for a number of new medical technological procedures that are
rooted in nuclear medical practices. One such medical technique is positron
emission tomography (PET). Positron Emission Tomography, or PET imaging or PET
scan as it is also referred to, a non-invasive diagnostic imaging procedure
that allows physicians to examine organs such as the heart and brain.
Originally used solely as a research tool, it was not until 1975 that the first
primarily used commercial PET scanner was introduced. With technological advances
made in the nuclear medicine field, the PET scan procedure moved from producing
digital coincidence to producing 3-D images in the 1980s. Despite these innovations,
Positron Emission Tomography was predominantly used in research. However, in
the early 1990s, the use of PET expanded into clinical use. Hospitals, diagnostic
clinics, mobile systems and physician practices began to understand the promise
of PET and began to master its use.
With cutting edge medical technological research, the use of PET does not seem
to be on the wane. A recent medical advance is the development of the PET/CT
to diagnose cancer. This device combines the unique ability of Positron Emission
Tomography technology to detect the metabolic signal of actively growing cancer
cells in the body with the ability of computed tomography (CT) to produce detailed
images of the internal anatomy, thus revealing the size, location, and shape
of abnormal cancerous growth. With this medical device, the images that are
produced provide a physician complete information of cancer location and metabolism.
The PET scan procedure differentiates itself as an imaging procedure from other
procedures like x-rays, computed tomography (CT), and magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) as it produces images that are able to detail the chemical function of
the targeted organ or tissue. The aforementioned procedures are only able to
detail body structure. This pronounced difference is important, as PET imaging
are able to make the distinction between benign (alive tissue) and malignant
(dead tissue) disorders. The aforementioned imaging procedures are only able
to confirm the presence of a mass. Consequently PET is a valuable tool for physicians
who require information about the chemical function of such vital organs as
the heart and brain in recommending a medical course of action.
How Positron Emission Tomography is able to produce these images are rooted
in the basis of nuclear medicine. In the PET scan procedure, a patient is given
a substance that is usually tagged with a radiopharmaceutical that has a short
decay time. Although many individuals are concerned about the presence of radiopharmaceuticals
within their body, the PET procedure is actually safe. The radiation content
of radiopharmaceuticals are minute and the patient is exposed to the radiation
equivalent of two chest x-rays. Radiopharmaceuticals are given to a patient
predominantly through injection, but can also be given through an existing intravenous
line or inhaled as a gas. Once the radiopharmaceutical is inside the body, it
travels to its targeted source.
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