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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: nuclear medicine + medicine procedure + patients  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Health-care have-nots
Sudbury Star, Canada - May 1, 2008
It is a nuclear medicine imaging technique that produces a three-dimensional image that provides more information than its cousin - the MRI (magnetic ...
Norman Cousins: A Spokesman for the Human Race
Mother Earth News, KS - May 9, 2008
I see a time coming in the development of medicine when doctors will continue to prescribe, but their prescriptions will not be on the basis of what they ...
US Oncology Applauds Journal of Clinical Oncology Study ...
Earthtimes (press release), UK - May 1, 2008
... said Dr. Landis Griffeth, US Oncology's National Medical Director for PET and Director of Nuclear Medicine at Baylor University Medical Center. ...
Dixie Regional receives PET
St. George Daily Spectrum, UT - Apr 22, 2008
Christy Bassett, another nuclear medicine technologist in the imaging department, said with the mobile unit, the hospital could only test patients twice a ...
Premier offers new technology
Cookeville Herald Citizen, TN - Apr 26, 2008
Besides the CCTA, Premier offers X-ray, ultrasound, MRI, nuclear medicine, virtual colonoscopy, digital mammography and dexa bone densitometry services. ...
Evaluation and Management of Stress Fractures of the Pelvis and Sacrum
Ortho SuperSite, NJ - Apr 24, 2008
Stress fractures are commonly encountered problem in sports medicine. They account for a significant percentage of overuse injuries and up to 15% of ...
Radiologist Review Questions and Answers
The Guardian, Canada - Apr 28, 2008
Mammography, nuclear medicine and bone mineral densitometry (BMD) exams were not affected. How long has this radiologist been working in Prince Edward ...
PET limit has a loophole
London Free Press, Canada - Apr 27, 2008
Ontario's position that PET scans are experimental has been controversial with the head of London's nuclear medicine program, Dr. Jean-Luc Urbain, ...

Ortho SuperSite
Chondroblastoma of trapezium with metacarpal involvement: a case ...
Ortho SuperSite, NJ - Apr 24, 2008
The authors thank K. Krishnan Unni, MB, BS, Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota for reviewing the ...
EVAR, a big leap for interventional radiology and a sigh of relief ...
Medicexchange.com (Press Release), UK - Apr 16, 2008
asks Dr. Bernhard Meyer, Department of Radiology and Nuclear medicine, Charit?-University Hospital, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Berlin Germany. ...
Source: Google News

patients with hyperparathyroidism using a single radionuclide imaging procedure with technetium-99m … -
R Taillefer - Journal of Nuclear Medicine, 1992 - Soc Nuclear Med
... Copyright ? 1992 by Society of Nuclear Medicine. ... parathyroid adenomas in patients
with hyperparathyroidism ... single radionuclide imaging procedure with technetium ...

The contribution of nuclear medicine to the patient with infection -
W Becker - European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 1995 - Springer
... in pathopJysiological and pathobiochemical processes in the patient, whereas
morphologically ... of an infectious process a nuclear medicine procedure needs high ...

Radiation dose to technicians per nuclear medicine procedure: comparison between technetium-99m, … -
C Chiesa, V De Sanctis, F Crippa, M Schiavini, CE … - European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 1997 - Springer
... tal determination of the dose to the nuclear medicine technicians per single procedure
may follow ... the dose rate at fixed distances from the patient and on ...

Coordination compounds in nuclear medicine -
S Jurisson, D Berning, W Jia, D Ma - Chemical Reviews, 1993 - pubs.acs.org
... area of radiopharmaceutical chemistry, and thereby nuclear medicine. ... Different nuclear
properties are required of ... diag- nostic imaging procedures the radiation ...

Measuring hypoxia and predicting tumor radioresistance with nuclear medicine assays -
JD Chapman, EL Engelhardt, CC Stobbe, RF Schneider … - Radiotherapy and Oncology, 1998 - Elsevier
... H-3-misonidazole uptake and binding in 27 patients indicated that ... tissues might be
amenable to non-invasive detection by nuclear medicine procedures [10, 18]. ...

Recent advances in preoperative and intraoperative nuclear medicine procedures in patients with … -
D Rubello, D Casara, B Shapiro - Panminerva Med, 2002 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
2002 Jun;44(2):99-105. Recent advances in preoperative and intraoperative nuclear
medicine procedures in patients with primary hyperparathyroidism. ...

Benefit of Carotid Endarterectomy in Patients with Symptomatic Moderate or Severe Stenosis -
HJM Barnett, DW Taylor, M Eliasziw, AJ Fox, GG … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1998 - content.nejm.org
... is beneficial up to two years after the procedure. ... Patients with severe stenosis (
70 percent) had a ... ME), Diagnostic Radiology and Nuclear Medicine (AJF, RNR ...

Population Radiation Absorbed Dose From Nuclear Medicine Procedures in the Netherlands. -
H Beekhuis - Health Physics, 1988 - health-physics.com
... and for the whole population per caput per year in the Netherlands from diagnostic
nuclear medicine procedures has been estimated using patient data from 10 ...

A Comparison of Immediate Coronary Angioplasty with Intravenous Streptokinase in Acute Myocardial … -
F Zijlstra, MJ de Boer, J Hoorntje, S Reiffers, J … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1993 - content.nejm.org
... in 64 of the 65 patients who underwent the procedure. ... was patent in 68 percent of
the patients in the ... FZ, MJB, JCAH, HS) and Nuclear Medicine (SR), Ziekenhuis ...

Risk assessment of the nuclear medicine patient -
PJ Mountford - British Journal of Radiology, 1997 - Br Inst Radiology
... in these estimates for adult and paediatric patients are uncertainties ... Effective
doses from most nuclear medicine procedures will not exceed twice the annual ...

Source: Google Scholar

Patients Need To Know that Nuclear Medicine Procedures Can Trigger Radiation Alarms

Outreach, Educational/Safety Materials Needed, Says Study Co-Funded by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention/Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality in December Journal of Nuclear Medicine

RESTON, Va.—Twenty million nuclear medicine procedures that detect and evaluate heart disease, brain disorders and cancer—and that use radiopharmaceuticals to treat overactive thyroids and some cancers—are performed each year. While health care providers in many facilities do provide patients with adequate information about nuclear medicine procedures, there’s room for improvement, says a study supported by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality that appears in the December Journal of Nuclear Medicine.

"Patients undergoing diagnostic procedures are less likely than patients undergoing therapeutic procedures to be informed that they could activate radiation alarms in public places," said Armin Ansari, a health physicist in the radiation studies branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Ga. "We also found that many health care professionals who administer radiopharmaceuticals to patients—or who communicate with them regarding the radiation safety aspects of their procedures—have not had any formal or systematic training in patient education, communications or counseling," he added.

"Before we began the study, casual conversations with patients who received diagnostic procedures (largely stress tests) suggested that many receive neither documentation nor counseling. Some are even unaware that their procedure involved trace amounts of radioactive materials and that they could indeed trigger radiation detection equipment in public places," said Ansari. The study, done in collaboration with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), examined the range of patient release procedures and practices among 66 health care facilities in 12 states. Participating facilities perform a range of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures including cardiac stress tests; positron emission tomography (PET), bone, lung and renal scans; thyroid uptake studies; whole body scans; I-131 hyperthyroid treatments; I-131 Bexxar cancer treatments; and brachytherapy. For the study, 89 health care professionals (including doctors, nuclear medicine technologists, radiation safety officers and physicists) were interviewed at large and small hospitals and outpatient-only clinics.

The study indicates that health care professionals—especially in outpatient facilities and those performing only diagnostic procedures—can benefit from an outreach program, detailing the need to inform and counsel all released patients. "Some standardization of basic instructions and documentation given to released patients would also be helpful," said Ansari. "Patients should know the importance of following the instructions given to them by their caregivers. They should feel comfortable asking questions and be forthcoming if there are some instructions they may have difficulty following (such as minimizing time in public). If patients plan to travel, they should make sure they have documentation on hand specifying their procedure and that the documentation includes a contact phone number for verification, if necessary," he explained.

"SNM has long advocated that its members—in offering high-quality care—provide patients with adequate information. This is particularly necessary in today’s high-security environment, where patients of some procedures could incidentally trigger radiation alarms in urban centers, federal buildings or while traveling," said SNM President Alexander J. McEwan, who represents more than 16,000 doctors, technologists and scientists. "This study shows that while many do provide information and special instructions to patients, there is still room for improvement and increased awareness," said the professor and chair of the Department of Oncology, Faculty of Medicine, at the University of Alberta, and director of oncologic imaging at Cross Cancer Institute in Edmonton, Canada. He noted that the society works closely with the CDC and the U.S. government on the issues discussed within the report and to increase awareness in the medical community.

"As this study points out, not all facilities are as well informed as they should be, and they are not doing the best they can to inform patients," says Henry Royal, former SNM president and an expert in radiation safety. "It is important that patients who find themselves in these rare situations are fully informed and have contact cards to work cooperatively with security officials," added Royal. "At Washington University, we have three preprinted wallet-size travel cards (radioiodine, sestamibi/thallium, miscellaneous) that we give to patients who receive therapeutic doses of I-131 or who are planning to travel in the days to weeks following a diagnostic procedure," said Royal, a professor of radiology at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and associate director of nuclear medicine at its Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology.

Federal regulations and guidelines describe when and how licensed health care facilities can release patients following a nuclear medicine procedure and address the safety instructions that facilities must provide to patients or to their parents or guardians to ensure that doses to other individuals remain "as low as is reasonably achievable." Since 2003, NRC supplemented these guidelines with a notice reminding health care professionals that released patients need to know the importance of following instructions so that a dose to other individuals can be maintained low and that the likelihood of triggering radiation alarms is reduced. The NRC suggests voluntary actions that health care professionals can take with every released patient whose body contains detectable amounts of radiation after receiving diagnostic or therapeutic quantities of radiopharmaceuticals or brachytherapy implants. These actions should include explaining to patients the potential to trigger radiation monitoring alarms and providing them with written information for law enforcement use.

Ansari and Luba Katz of Abt Associates in Cambridge, Mass., reported their results in "Survey of Patient Release Information on Radiation and Security Checkpoints," which appears in the December issue of the Journal of Nuclear Medicine, which is published by SNM, the world’s largest molecular imaging and nuclear medicine society.

Nuclear medicine—a vital component of the rapidly emerging field of molecular imaging—is a medical specialty that uses small amounts of radioactive materials bound to special compounds (radiopharmaceuticals) in combination with imaging scans that examine molecular processes in the body to detect and evaluate heart disease, brain disorders and cancer. In addition, radiopharmaceuticals are used to treat overactive thyroids and some cancers.

Credentialed press: To obtain a copy of this article—and online access to the Journal of Nuclear Medicine— please contact Maryann Verrillo by phone at (703) 652-6773 or send an e-mail to mverrillo@snm.org. Current and past issues of the Journal of Nuclear Medicine can be found online at http://jnm.snmjournals.org. Print copies can be obtained by contacting the SNM Service Center, 1850 Samuel Morse Drive, Reston, VA 20190-5316; phone (800) 513-6853; e-mail servicecenter@snm.org; fax (703) 708-9015. A subscription to the journal is an SNM member benefit.


About SNM—Advancing Molecular Imaging and Therapy
SNM is an international scientific and professional organization of more than 16,000 members dedicated to promoting the science, technology and practical applications of molecular and nuclear imaging to diagnose, manage and treat diseases in women, men and children. Founded more than 50 years ago, SNM continues to provide essential resources for health care practitioners and patients; publish the most prominent peer-reviewed journal in the field (Journal of Nuclear Medicine); host the premier annual meeting for medical imaging; sponsor research grants, fellowships and awards; and train physicians, technologists, scientists, physicists, chemists and radiopharmacists in state-of-the-art imaging procedures and advances. SNM members have introduced—and continue to explore—biological and technological innovations in medicine that noninvasively investigate the molecular basis of diseases, benefiting countless generations of patients. SNM is based in Reston, Va.; additional information can be found online at http://www.snm.org.

 
 
 
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