NUCLEAR MEDICINE
At Imaging Associates we offer diagnostic and therapeutic nuclear medicine at our Mat-Su Bogard Road location.
About Nuclear Medicine
Nuclear Medicine is a medical specialty that uses very small amounts of radioactive substances, or tracers, to diagnose or treat disease. Tracers are attracted to specific organs, bones, or tissues in the body. They produce emissions, which can be imaged with a special type of camera called a gamma camera. Nuclear medicine differs from an x-ray, ultrasound or other diagnostic test because it determines the presence of disease based on biological changes rather than changes in anatomy. Our physicians interpret the images to determine the cause of the medical problem.
Patient Preparation
Your patient will be given specific instructions depending on your exam or treatment. Some exams require no preparations while others require you follow a specific dietary and other guidelines 24 hours prior to your appointment. Please have your patients call Imaging Associates of Providence at 357-1220 for prep instructions.
What Patients Can Expect
Nuclear medicine procedures are safe, effective and painless. Before the test begins, the patient will be given a small amount of radioactive material, called a radioisotope, which will be injected or swallowed. There should be little or no discomfort involved in the test.
How the test is performed depends on the type of scan has been ordered. In many cases, there will be a delay between the time patients are given the isotope and the time the scan is actually made. This allows the isotope time to flow through the body and concentrate in the organ to be examined. In some cases, a series of scans will be taken with a delay of an hour or two between them.
In most studies, patients lie comfortably on a table as a large camera is positioned over the body and moved or rotated around the patient, depending on the test. The camera senses the radioactive substance and highlights and displays this information on a screen or film.
Tracers are generally administered by injection into an arm vein, but they may also be inhaled or swallowed. Side effects or adverse reactions are rare, and patients will feel no effect from the tracer itself.
Sometimes a waiting period is required before imaging begins to give the tracer time to accumulate in the area being studied.
Kinds of Tests & Treatments
Nuclear medicine is used for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes for hyperthyroidism and thyroid cancer. At Imaging Associates, we offer:
- Bone Scans
- Brain Scans
- Cardiac Testing
- Thyroid, Kidney, Liver, and Gallbladder Studies
- Breast Imaging
- Gastro-intestinal Bleeding Scans
- Gastric Emptying Studies
- Scans to evaluate infections and tumors
- Thyroid therapy
Nuclear Medicine is Safe
Nuclear medicine procedures are among the safest diagnostic imaging exams available. The amount of radiopharmaceutical used is carefully selected to provide the least amount of radiation exposure to the patient but to ensure an accurate test. Because such a small amount of the radiopharmaceutical is used, the amount of radiation received from a nuclear medicine procedure is comparable to, or often times less than, that of a diagnostic x-ray.
The nuclear medicine team will carefully perform the most appropriate examination for your patient’s particular medical problem — and thus avoid any unnecessary radiation exposure. As you know, everyone is continually exposed to radiation from natural and manmade sources. For most people, natural background radiation from air and space, rocks, soil, and even atoms in your own body, accounts for 85 percent of the radiation you receive annually. Additional exposure to radiation comes from consumer products such as household smoke detectors, color television sets, and luminous clock dials. The remaining radiation is from x-rays and radioactive materials used for medical diagnosis and therapy. Most nuclear medicine procedures expose patients to about the same amount of radiation as they receive in a few months of normal living.
Getting Test Results
After the study is done, the images will be evaluated by one of our board-certified radiologists and a preliminary report will be faxed to you. The official final report will be sent within 24-48 hours and you’ll be able to discuss the results with your patient in detail.
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