| | Nuclear
Medicine Nuclear
medicine specialists use safe, painless, and cost-effective techniques to image
the body and treat disease. Nuclear medicine imaging is unique, because it provides
doctors with information about both structure and function. It is a way to gather
medical information that would otherwise be unavailable, require surgery, or necessitate
more expensive diagnostic tests. Nuclear medicine imaging procedures often identify
abnormalities very early in the progress of a disease-long before many medical
problems are apparent with other diagnostic tests.
Nuclear
medicine uses very small amounts of radioactive materials (radiopharmaceuticals)
to diagnose and treat disease. In imaging, the radiopharmaceuticals are detected
by special types of cameras that work with computers to provide very precise pictures
about the area of the body being imaged. In treatment, the radiopharmaceuticals
go directly to the organ being treated. The amount of radiation in a typical nuclear
imaging procedure is comparable with that received during a diagnostic x-ray,
and the amount received in a typical treatment procedure is kept within safe limits.
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