Nuclear medicine Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Nuclear Medicine – uses internally administered radioactive substances to image or treat disease; focuses on physiologic function rather than anatomy.
Radiopharmaceutical – a drug labeled with a radionuclide; given by inhalation, IV injection, or oral ingestion.
Scintigraphy – 2‑D imaging that captures gamma photons emitted from the radiopharmaceutical within the body.
SPECT – 3‑D technique that rotates a gamma camera to reconstruct tomographic slices.
PET – 3‑D technique that detects coincident 511 keV photons from positron annihilation; often combined with CT (PET/CT).
Hybrid Imaging – fuses functional nuclear images with CT or MRI anatomy (e.g., SPECT/CT, PET/CT).
ALARP – “As Low As Reasonably Practicable”; the safety principle guiding radiation exposure.
Effective Dose – expressed in millisieverts (mSv); accounts for administered activity (MBq), radionuclide properties, biodistribution, and clearance.
📌 Must Remember
Most common nuclear modalities: SPECT and PET.
Key diagnostic radionuclides: Tc‑99m, I‑123, I‑131, Tl‑201, Ga‑67, F‑18 FDG, In‑111 leukocytes.
Tc‑99m source: Mo‑99 generator (fission product of U‑235).
F‑18 production: Cyclotron bombarding O‑18 with protons → incorporated into FDG.
Hybrid benefit: Improves diagnostic accuracy without extra invasive procedures.
Radiation safety rule: Benefit must justify exposure; keep dose “as low as reasonably practicable.”
Therapeutic advantage: Emitted radiation travels only short distances → spares surrounding tissue.
🔄 Key Processes
Radiopharmaceutical Administration
Choose route (inhalation, IV, oral).
Ensure patient preparation (diet, meds) per study protocol.
2‑D Scintigraphy Workflow
Inject radionuclide → gamma camera detects emitted photons → produce planar image.
SPECT Acquisition
Rotate gamma camera around patient → collect projections → reconstruct slices → stack for 3‑D volume.
PET Acquisition
Inject positron emitter → detect coincident 511 keV photon pairs → reconstruct functional maps.
Hybrid Image Fusion
Acquire nuclear scan + CT/MRI → software aligns datasets → overlay functional data onto anatomy.
🔍 Key Comparisons
Scintigraphy vs. SPECT – planar (2‑D) images only vs. tomographic (3‑D) reconstruction.
SPECT vs. PET – SPECT uses single‑photon emitters (e.g., Tc‑99m) → lower resolution; PET uses positron emitters (e.g., F‑18) → higher resolution and quantitative capability.
Generator‑based vs. Cyclotron‑based radionuclide production – Mo‑99/Tc‑99m from reactor‑derived generator vs. F‑18 from cyclotron target irradiation.
Diagnostic vs. Therapeutic radiopharmaceuticals – diagnostic: trace physiological pathways; therapeutic: deliver cytotoxic radiation to target tissue.
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Nuclear = high‑dose” – Many studies deliver doses comparable to background or a routine CT; dose is optimized, not automatically large.
“SPECT images are just blurry CTs” – SPECT reflects function, not anatomy; anatomical detail comes only after fusion with CT/MRI.
“All radionuclides decay the same way” – Decay mode (gamma, beta‑plus, beta‑minus) determines imaging vs. therapy suitability.
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Firefly in a dark room” – Imagine each radiopharmaceutical as a firefly that glows where the target organ is active; the camera records where the light appears.
“Layer cake” – In hybrid imaging, think of a functional layer (nuclear) stacked on an anatomical layer (CT/MRI) to see both “what” and “where.”
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
V/Q scan for pulmonary embolism – Requires both ventilation and perfusion images; a normal perfusion scan can rule out PE even if ventilation is abnormal.
Parathyroid subtraction imaging – Uses dual‑energy acquisition to subtract thyroid uptake and isolate parathyroid adenoma; not needed for routine thyroid scans.
📍 When to Use Which
Choose Scintigraphy when a quick planar survey (e.g., whole‑body bone scan) suffices.
Choose SPECT for organ‑specific functional detail with 3‑D localization (e.g., cardiac perfusion).
Choose PET for high‑resolution metabolic imaging, especially oncology (FDG‑PET/CT).
Add CT/MRI fusion when anatomical correlation is critical for surgical planning or lesion localization.
👀 Patterns to Recognize
Uptake patterns – focal intense uptake → possible tumor or infection; diffuse uptake → physiologic or systemic process.
Mismatch on V/Q – ventilation present, perfusion absent → classic pulmonary embolism clue.
Cold spots on bone scintigraphy – may indicate avascular necrosis or prior fracture.
🗂️ Exam Traps
“PET always uses Tc‑99m” – false; PET relies on positron emitters (F‑18, etc.), not Tc‑99m.
“All hybrid images are PET/CT” – false; SPECT/CT and PET/MRI also exist.
“Effective dose is the same as administered activity” – false; effective dose depends on radionuclide physics, biodistribution, and clearance, not just MBq injected.
“ALARP means zero exposure” – misleading; ALARP means exposure is minimized while still achieving diagnostic benefit, not eliminated.
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