Nuclear
Medicine
Answering Your Questions
What is nuclear medicine?
This
is a branch of medicine that uses radiation to provide
information about a person’s anatomy and the
functioning of specific organs. In most cases, the
information enables physicians to provide a quick, accurate
diagnosis of conditions such as cancer, heart disease,
thyroid disorders and bone fractures. In some cases,
radiation is used to treat the condition.
What
are the benefits of nuclear medicine?
Nuclear
medicine enables doctors to produce a quick, accurate
diagnosis of a wide range of conditions and diseases in a
person of any age. This allows the appropriate treatment to
begin as early as possible, which means it has a far
greater chance of being fully effective. In addition, the
tests are painless and most scans expose patients to only
minimal amounts of radiation. Nuclear medicine provides an
effective means of examining whether some tissues are
functioning properly.
Therapy using nuclear medicine is an effective, safe and
relatively inexpensive way of controlling, and in some
cases eliminating, conditions such as overactive thyroid,
thyroid cancer and arthritis.
Nuclear medicine is a vital part of health care as it gives
many people the opportunity of continuing to live full and
healthy lives.
What is radiation?
Radiation
is a type of energy that exists in our environment in many
forms. It comes from both natural and man-made sources.
Light that allows us to see, and the warmth we get from the
sun or from a fire, are natural forms of radiation.
Examples of man-made radiation include the microwave
radiation that is used for cooking, and radio waves used
for communication over long distances. Ionising radiation
comes from both natural and man-made sources. It comes from
outer space, the sun, the earth, the air and our food and
drink, and from building materials such as concrete, bricks
and mortar. This is the natural background radiation to
which everyone is exposed. Nuclear medicine studies use
ionising radiation, as do x-ray studies.
Is nuclear medicine safe?
Nuclear
medicine is extremely safe because the radioactive tracers,
or radiopharmaceuticals, used are quickly eliminated from
the body through its natural functions. In addition, the
tracers used rapidly lose their radioactivity. In most
cases, the dose of radiation necessary for a scan is very
small. For example, a patient having a lung scan is exposed
to the same dose of radiation they would receive from two
return air flights between Sydney and London.
How are radiopharmaceuticals produced?
Australia
is one of a limited number of countries that produce the
radioactive tracers necessary for diagnostic nuclear
medicine. If we were not able to produce
radiopharmaceuticals here, we would have to import them
from as far away as Europe, South Africa or North America.
The radiopharmaceuticals are primarily manufactured at two
facilities operated by
ANSTO--at
its nuclear research reactor located at Lucas Heights,
near Sydney, and at its cyclotron at Camperdown in
Sydney. Smaller cyclotrons operate in Melbourne,
Brisbane and Perth. The manufacturing processes at all
facilities are regulated by strict quality control
requirements approved by government. Although both
reactors and cyclotrons can produce
radiopharmaceuticals, each produces a different type of
radiopharmaceutical. Both types are supplied to nuclear
medicine centres across Australia. Hence, both reactors
and cyclotrons are necessary.
Every year thousands of people are diagnosed and treated at
nuclear medicine centres. Without access to this vital
technology, they would face a reduced quality of medical
care.
When is a scan needed?
Scans
using radiopharmaceuticals can diagnose all sort of
conditions. Scans of the heart, thyroid, lungs and kidney
are common. However, by far the majority of scans involve
the skeleton. These are usually carried out to diagnose
infection, tumour spread, fractures and sports injuries.
Should I prepare for a scan in any way?
Some
tests may require special preparation. Make sure your
doctor explains this for you. For example if you are having
a cardiac stress test you will need to fast for a few hours
before the test and abstain from caffeine containing
compounds including tea, coffee and cola for 24 hours. As
with many other tests, if you are pregnant, or think you
may be, or if you are breastfeeding, you must tell us. It
is important that you read all the material given to you
prior to your appointment. If further information is
required, please ring your referring doctor or Northcoast
Nuclear Medicine.
What can I expect when I have a scan?
When
you undergo a scan, a radiopharmaceutical will be given,
either by injection into a vein, by mouth or through a
breathing device. The radiopharmaceutical will concentrate
in the particular part of your body under investigation.
Sometimes you may have to wait for a few hours or even a
day or two after the pharmaceutical has been administered
for the scan to be done. This is because it may take a
while for the pharmaceutical to lodge in the part of your
body to be examined. For a bone scan this delay is 2 or 3
hours, so if you won’t be going home or to the shops
in this period you might like to bring something to drink
and eat.
As the radiopharmaceutical travels, it continuously gives
off invisible radiation, known as gamma rays.Using a
special camera called a gamma camera, doctors can detect
the location of the radiopharmaceutical in your body.
During your scan, the camera will be positioned close to
the part of your body being scanned. If you are
claustrophobic, please notify the staff before the
radiopharmaceutical is administered.
Computers enhance the camera images on a screen. Doctors
will be able to tell if the part of your body being tested
is functioning normally. A copy of the images will be
available for your doctor.
Will it hurt?
A
scan involves nothing more painful than an injection into a
vein, rather like the one you’d have for a blood
test. Injections given subcutaneously as part of
lymphoscintigraphy may sting for a few seconds.
Will I have to stay in hospital?
Patients
having a diagnostic scan may be asked to stay a few hours
in the nuclear medicine department, although in some cases
patients are asked to return for a number of visits.
If you are undergoing therapy, for example for an
overactive thyroid gland, you will be treated as an
outpatient and won’t need to stay in hospital. There
will be some simple precautions regarding coming in close
contact with people. This is not because of any risk to
your health but because our doctors want to ensure that the
remnants of the radiopharmaceuticals are dealt with safely
when they are excreted from your body. Detailed written
instructions will be provided for you.
Some therapy, for exaple for thyroid cancer, require
admission to a specially shielded room in a hospital for a
few days.
What does nuclear medicine treatment involve?
By
far the widest application of nuclear medicine is for
diagnosis. However, there are a number of occasions when
radioactive materials are used to treat certain conditions,
particularly cancer. This is known as therapy.
The most common conditions treated are overactive thyroid
and thyroid cancer. Radiopharmaceuticals are also injected
into the body, usually into the joints, to treat conditions
such as arthritis. Newer treatments involve the intravenous
injection of radiopharmaceuticals for the relief of pain
from tumours that have spread to bone.
Who carries out nuclear medicine
procedures?
If
your doctor recommends you for a scan or nuclear medicine
treatment, you will be placed in the care of our team
of
specially trained
professionals.
Physicians, technologists, nurses and pharmacists will
ensure that you receive a high level of care and that
your doctor is provided with accurate reports on your
condition.
Are there any side effects?
Side
effects are extremely rare for diagnostic scans. Serious
reactions never occur. Allergic reactions are usually very
mild, For example skin rashes happen about 1 in 10,000 bone
scan injections. When radiation or radiopharmaceuticals are
used in therapy, there are sometimes minor side effects
such as nausea or swelling in the salivary glands. To
prevent the latter, patients are often advised to simply
suck lollies.
What happens after a scan or therapy?
Northcoast
Nuclear Medicine’s specially trained physicians will
report on the scan’s appearance and send the results
to your doctor to evaluate, together with those of any
other tests you may have had. In the majority of cases, you
will be able to continue your daily lifestyle as usual.
If you have any queries please do not hesitate to discuss
them with your referring doctor or with us at Northcoast
Nuclear Medicine.