
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.
Today, nuclear medicine offers procedures that are essential in many medical specialties, from pediatrics to cardiology
to psychiatry. New and innovative nuclear medicine treatments that target and pinpoint molecular levels within the body are
revolutionizing our understanding of and approach to a range of diseases and conditions.
Here are some Additional
Patient Resource links:
Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM)
American Board of Nuclear Medicine (ABNM)
American Board of Science in Nuclear Medicine (ABSNM)
American College of Nuclear Medicine (ABSNM)
American College of Nuclear Physicians (ACNP)
American Society of Nuclear Cardiology (ASNC)
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