English |
Title | A Technique for Dynamic Isotope Flow Studies |
Subtitle | |
Authors | Marvin Rollins |
Authors(kana) | |
Organization | Section on Radiotherapy and Nuclear Medicine, Department of Radiology, Lutheran Hospital, Assistant Clinical Professor, Radiology, Case Western Reserve University |
Journal | The Japanese Journal of nuclear medicine |
Volume | 7 |
Number | 2 |
Page | 126-126 |
Year/Month | 1970/6 |
Article | Report |
Publisher | THE JAPANESE SOCIETY OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE |
Abstract | In the seach for a diagnostic methodology which is atraumatic and without morbidity and mortality, dynamic isotope flow studies or "motion" scanning is probably the procedure of choice in the diagnosis of, and in the delineation of the extent of, those diseases due to, or reflected by, the absence of or the alteration of normal flow rate phenomena in the vascular space or extra-vascular space; for example, delineating thrombotic or embolic phenomena involving the vasculature of the brain. The inherent ability of imaging camera, such as the Anger camera, to simultaneously detect and accurately display radative events over the entire viewing area of the entire viewing area of the collimator crystal complex makes the imaging camera the sine qua non for depicting dynamic flow studies. |
Practice | Clinical medicine |
Keywords | |