Quantcast
breaking news

Nuclear Medicine

By: WUTR Eyewitness News
Updated: March 16, 2012
watch video
Nuclear medicine may sound like a wave of the future, but it is actually used in hospitals today. For a rare behind the scenes look at what it is, Caroline Gable went to Little Falls Hospital to find out exactly how it's used.  

Every precaution is taken when it comes to using radioactive materials. But what exactly is nuclear medicine? Chief Nuclear Technician Erik Strail explains it this way, "Nuclear medicine is the study of the major organs of the body but we use radioactive isotopes to visualize them."

It's a process not harmful to the body, resulting in images with bright colors. A scan takes no more radiation than a chest x-ray, but it goes into the blood stream and throughout the whole body. "We start an I.V. just like we do with our modalities, and after the I.V. is put in we do an injection of the radioactive isotope we are using (depending on the different exams we are doing,) we let it circulate into the body and then the person goes on the table," says Strail.

Some pictures are delayed pictures and some are done right away depending on the test. Most tests range between one and two hours. There is no side effect or reaction, because an isotope is used and not a die. But patients will of course feel the I.V.

"We have a cardiologist here. I'm here. We have an EKG here, and we also have something to reverse the effect if they do have a problem," assures Strail. A popular use of nuclear medicine is for stress tests, but kidney and gallbladder function can also be better defined after this test. The use of nuclear medicine can also reveal other specific things happening in a patient's body or bones.

Comments

Readers Feel...

hello
Related Content

...

Final Score: Sherburne-Earlville 2, Cooperstown 0...

Security, charity bibs and the post-race party were among a handful of topics discussed tonight at the third Boilermaker committee meeting....

He was a student during the good times....

It's all about running...And beer...And it happens in Central New York......

70 years ago an eager young Herb Thorpe left his native Brooklyn and went upstate to serve in the Civilian Conservation Corp...

Family and community members are mourning the loss of 23-month-old baby girl Ashi Kah of Utica. New Hartford Police responded to reports of the child drowning at Washington Mills Athletic Park She a...

The Utica community is coming together to support the search for Levon Wameling....

"Literally they've seen it all" says The Boilermaker's Executive Director Tim Reed....

Final Score: Morrisville 7, Westmoreland 1....

 
 
 
 
 
©1998 - 2013 Cnyhomepage.com
Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc.
All Rights Reserved