Table of Contents

Infection/Inflammation

In 111 WBC

In 111 WBC w/ SC

Ga 67

Tc MDP

Thyroid/Parathyroid

General

Therapy

Contraindications to I-131 therapy

Drug interactions

Medication Withdrawl Period
Antithyroid medication (propylthiouracil,
methimazole, carbimazole) and multivitamins
3 days for antithyroid medication
7 days for multivitamins
Thyroid hormone 2 weeks for cytomel
4 to 6 weeks for synthyroid
Kelp, Lugol's solution, SSKI solution 2 to 3 weeks
IV contrast Over 1 month
Amiodarone 3 to 6 months

Alternatives

Dose calculations

Thyroid Patterns

Congenital

I 123

I 131

Short-term complications

Long-term complications

Pertechnetate

Tc sestamibi

Causes of increased activity on delayed images:

Liver

IDA

Gallbladder Ejection Fraction

Delayed Biliary to Bowel Transit

Tc SC

Gastric Emptying

Oncology

PET

I 131 MIBG

In 111 octreoscan (pentreotide)

In 111 Prostascint

Neuro

Brain perfusion study or FDG-PET

Brain flow

Cisternogram

Pulmonary

General

PIOPED

High Probability

  1. Greater than or equal to 2 large mismatched segmental perfusion defects or the arithmetic equivalent in moderate or large and moderate defects. A high probability lung scan confirms a very high likelihood for pulmonary embolism and justifies treatment with anticoagulation (unless contraindicated)

Intermediate Probability

  1. One moderate to 2 large mismatched perfusion defects or the arithmetic equivalent in moderate or large and moderate defects
  2. Single matched ventilation-perfusion defect with a clear chest radiograph
    • Single ventilation-perfusion matches are borderline for “low probability” and thus should be categorized as “intermediate” in most circumstances by most readers, although individual readers may correctly interpret individual scintigrams with this pattern as “low probability”
  3. Difficult to categorize as low or high, or not described as low or high.

Low Probability

  1. Perfusion defects matched by ventilation abnormality provided that there are: (a) clear chest radiograph and (b) some areas of normal perfusion in the lungs
    • Extensive matched V/Q abnormalities are appropriate for low probability, provided that the CXR is clear
  2. Any perfusion defect with a substantially larger chest radiographic abnormality
  3. Any number of small perfusion defects with a normal chest radiograph
  4. Nonsegmental perfusion defects (e.g., cardiomegaly, enlarged aorta, enlarged hila, elevated diaphragm)
  5. Multiple matched V/Q abnormalities, even when relatively extensive, are low probability for PE
    • The prevalence of PE in patients with extensive matched V/Q defects and no CXR abnormality was 14% (low probability)

Normal

  1. No perfusion defects or perfusion exactly outlines the shape of the lungs seen on the chest radiograph (note that hila and aortic impressions may be seen and the chest radiograph and/or ventilation study may be abnormal)

Defect Descriptors, Identified in Studies Other Than PIOPED

Xe 133

Tc DTPA

Tc MAA

Renal

Tc DMSA

Mag 3

Captopril renography

Cardiac

General

Interpretation

Transient Ischemic Dilitation

Exercise Stress

Adenosine

Dobutamine

MuGA

Miscellaneous

Tc RBC

Labeling Technique

Free pertecnetate

One-liners

Differentials

Hot mets on bone scan

Cold defect on bone scan (HM RANT)

Superscan

One Lung Absent Perfusion

Increased MDP Soft Tissue Uptake

Focal Increased MDP Three Phase Activity

Increased Cortical MDP Uptake

Monoarticular Arthritis

Young Child w/ Hot Lesion on bone scan

Diseases

Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB)

Artifacts

Quality Control

Gamma Camera QC

Peak

Flood

Linearity and resolution

Field Uniformity and Center of Rotation

Spect QC

Flood

COR and detector malalignment

Motion

Attenuation

PET QC

Check scan (blank)

Bucket setup

2D and 3D normalization

* weekly to monthly or after bucket setup

Phantom calibration

* on new 68Ge phantom

Dose Calibrator QC

Constancy

Channel Check

Linearity

Accuracy

Geometry

Radiopharmaceutical QC

Sterility

Chemical Purity

Radionuclide Purity

Radiochemical Purity

NRC Guidelines

Radiation Safety

Decay Mechanisms

Common radionuclides

keV
99mTc 6h 140
TcO4-, Mibi, RBCs, SC,
Mag-3, DTPA, DMSA, ECD
201Tl 3d 80
Tl Chloride
111In 3d173, 247
WBC, octreoscan, DTPA
67Ga 3d100,200,300,400
Ga citrate
123I 13h159
iodide, MIBG, NP59
131I 8d364 + -
iodide, MIBG, NP59
133Xe 5d81
Xe gas
18F 110m511
FDG

Decay properties

inverse square law

HVL and TVL (shielding)

Gamma Camera

Gamma camera

collimator, crystal, PMT, preamplifier, amplifier, CPU

Collimators

99Mo - 99mTc Generator

99Mo Breakthrough Test

Aluminum Ion Breakthrough

Radiation Interaction with Matter

photoelectric effect

internal conversion

Compton scatter

+

annihilation

- and -

ionization

Exposure, Dose, Dose Equivalent

SU IU
X = Q/mRC/kg
D = E/m100 radGy
DE = D x Q100 remSv

Occupational Dose Limits

Background0.3 rem / y
Whole body5 rem / y
Lens15 rem / y
Extremities / skin / organ50 rem / y
Cumulative dose1 rem x age
Fetus0.5 rem / 9 m
0.05 rem / m
General population0.1 rem / y

Women, Pregnancy, and Lactation

In women of childbearing age:

For lactating females, stop breastfeeding:

Radiation safety general concepts

ALARA

Stochastic

Non-stochastic

Receipt of Radioactive Materials

Radiation surveys

Daily Monitoring

Spills

Minor spills

Major spills

Misadministration of Radiopharmaceuticals

Diagnostic Misadministration
Therapeutic Misadministration

Medical event = recordable event

Diagnostic Misadministration

Reportable Events

Diagnostic Misadministration

Therapeutic Misadministration

I-131 Therapy

Before Therapy

Precautions

  1. Always wash your hands with soap and water after you use the bathroom. Dry your hands thoroughly with a towel that only you are using
  2. Separate all towels, washcloths, and bed linens. Wash all of these items separate from the family wash
  3. In order to dilute the amount of radiation in urine and feces, always flush the toilet at least two or three times after using the bathroom
  4. Wash the bathroom sink, shower, bathtub and bidet after each use
  5. Separate your plates, silverware and drinking cups. Better yet, use paper plates and plastic cutlery, so you won't have to wash your dishes separately from the rest of the family
  6. If you are cooking for the family, remember not to taste any of the food with a spoon that will be used for food preparation. Once it touches the saliva in your mouth it is considered to be contaminated and must be washed separately
  7. Sleep in a separate bed from your partner. Avoid open mouth kissing and all sexual contact
  8. Radiation exposure is directly related to the amount of time you spend with another person as well as how intimate and close your contact is with them. Avoid prolonged intimate physical contact with babies, children and pregnant women. You may perform all essential duties such as changing diapers, if no one else is available to help you. Wash your hands before and after these tasks
  9. In order to flush out the radiation faster, keep yourself well hydrated (preferably with water) so that the radioactive iodine will be passed out of your body through your urine.

Clearance for discharge after therapeutic administration

Contacts must receive < 500 mrem total body dose

Transportation

Close contacts

Casual contacts