Module 6 Medical Imaging Flashcards
What is the function of a gamma camera?
Detects gamma radiation emitted by tracers in the body and converts it to electrical energy to produce an image
What are the stages to a gamma camera?
Collimator, Scintillator, Photomultiplier tube, Detector
Describe the structure of a collimator?
A grid of parallel lead tubes
Why do the grids of lead tubes need to be parallel?
To ensure accurate detection as they don’t know where they come from otherwise
All non-parallel photons are absorbed by the lead
Why must tubes be long and narrow?
To help distinguish between organs and to improve the resolution of the image
What is a scintillator?
Absorbs gamma radiation and converts energy to many photons of visible light
What is a scintillator usually made from?
Sodium iodide
What are photomultiplier tubes?
Photocathodes which release electrons when struck by visible photons, which are then multiplied by a series of dynodes to produce short impulses of current
What is the function of dynodes?
Increase the number of electrons in the photomultiplier tubes to produce short impulses of current
What is the brightness of each pixel generated by a gamma camera linked to?
The number of gamma photons in each tube of the collimator
What are medical tracers?
Radioactive isotopes which are attached to suitable compounds and injected into a patient
What are given to patients so that a gamma camera can be used?
Medical radioactive tracers
Why are gamma cameras advantageous?
Non-invasive and thus little to no risk of infection
What is the advantage of non-invasive procedures?
Allows imaging of organs without surgery, minimizing the risk of infection
What is a danger of gamma cameras?
Patients must be given ionizing radiation
How can the amount of ionizing radiation a patient is exposed to be limited?
Using a pure gamma emitter
Why can an alpha emitter not be used?
Very high ionizing power so may be dangerous to the patient and will not escape the body
What is the ideal half-life for an isotope?
6 hours so after a day activity is minimal
What is an advantage of using a shorter half-life?
Higher activity means better quality image
What is the ideal isotope used in medical tracing?
Technetium-99m
What does the m in technetium-99m mean?
Meta stable
Why is technetium-99m an ideal isotope?
In an excited state but does not emit gamma right away, half-life of 6 hours so can be injected and incorporated into target organs without losing activity
Why is technetium-99 (no m) safe to exist within the body?
Has an extremely long half-life of 211,000 years so hardly any emission occurs within the patient
What does PET stand for?
Positron Emission Tomography