More than 130 radionuclides are being used worldwide for therapeutic, diagnostic, and preventative purposes in the medical field. Using radionuclides, different organs can be imaged, and malfunction revealed. The most commonly used radionuclide in diagnosis by SPECT is technetium-99m (99mTc), with some 40 million procedures yearly, almost 80% of all nuclear medicine procedures in the world. The Positron Emission Tomography (PET) is sophisticated and more precise technique using isotopes, like 18F produced in a cyclotron. The synthesis and use of organic molecules and their labeling with radionuclides are currently dominating in new radiopharmaceutical development. On the other hand inorganics (60Co, 131I and 192Ir) are still playing uniqu...
Positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and the comb...
The concept of carrying a cytotoxic radionuclide directly to cancerous cells is an attractive altern...
This article follows the article An Introduction to Nuclear Medicine published in this issue of The ...
Radiopharmaceutical material is a pharmaceutical product or drug that may exert spontaneous degradat...
The book Radioisotopes - Applications in Bio-Medical Science contains two sections: Radioisotopes an...
In the recent few decades, there was a growth in the field of radioactive medicinal agents called ra...
Introduction: Nuclear medicine is a branch of medicine that uses small amounts of radioactive materi...
Radiopharmaceuticals are radioactive compounds which have a bound radionuclide in their structure. I...
This article continues from the earlier article "An Introduction to Nuclear Medicine" where the gene...
Dr. Silvia S. Jurisson, Dissertation Supervisor.Includes vita.Field of study: Chemistry."May 2018."[...
Nuclear medicine is defined as the use of radionuclides for diagnostic and therapeutic applications....
IntroductionThe significance of nuclear data in the choice and medical application of a radionuclide...
Many of modern diagnostic methods cannot be achieved without radioisotopes. In this review, an overv...
Currently, the practice of nuclear medicine in modern countries comprises a large number of procedur...
Positron emission tomography (PET) uses radioactive tracers and enables the functional imaging of se...
Positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and the comb...
The concept of carrying a cytotoxic radionuclide directly to cancerous cells is an attractive altern...
This article follows the article An Introduction to Nuclear Medicine published in this issue of The ...
Radiopharmaceutical material is a pharmaceutical product or drug that may exert spontaneous degradat...
The book Radioisotopes - Applications in Bio-Medical Science contains two sections: Radioisotopes an...
In the recent few decades, there was a growth in the field of radioactive medicinal agents called ra...
Introduction: Nuclear medicine is a branch of medicine that uses small amounts of radioactive materi...
Radiopharmaceuticals are radioactive compounds which have a bound radionuclide in their structure. I...
This article continues from the earlier article "An Introduction to Nuclear Medicine" where the gene...
Dr. Silvia S. Jurisson, Dissertation Supervisor.Includes vita.Field of study: Chemistry."May 2018."[...
Nuclear medicine is defined as the use of radionuclides for diagnostic and therapeutic applications....
IntroductionThe significance of nuclear data in the choice and medical application of a radionuclide...
Many of modern diagnostic methods cannot be achieved without radioisotopes. In this review, an overv...
Currently, the practice of nuclear medicine in modern countries comprises a large number of procedur...
Positron emission tomography (PET) uses radioactive tracers and enables the functional imaging of se...
Positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and the comb...
The concept of carrying a cytotoxic radionuclide directly to cancerous cells is an attractive altern...
This article follows the article An Introduction to Nuclear Medicine published in this issue of The ...