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What is radiopharmaceutical?

Updated: 8/10/2023
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11y ago

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Radio pharmaceutical is a compound used in medicine that have a radioactive atom in the molecule, radio pharmaceuticals are both diagnostic purposes or for therapy.

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10y ago

A radionuclide is an atom with an unstable nucleus that emits radiation. A radiopharmaceutical is a radionuclide used in radiotherapy or diagnosis.

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Q: What is radiopharmaceutical?
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If you bind an antibody with an isotope eg Cu 64 Is this considered a radiopharmaceutical or is the Cu the radiopharmaceutical?

A radiopharmaceutical is that copmound which contains a radiocative nuclide within and can be used safely for diagnosis or treatment of an abnormal state or a disease state. According to this accepted definition of a radiopharmaceutical, the answer should be, yes , an antibody bound Cu64 can be considered a radiopharmaceutical.


What is administered in preparation for a nuclear scan?

radiopharmaceutical


What medical procedure code does 78800 stand for?

CPT Code 78800 - Radiopharmaceutical localization of tumor or distribution of radiopharmaceutical agent(s); limited area.


Which substance is administered in preparation for a nuclear scan?

radiopharmaceutical


What diagnostic procedure involves the use of a radiopharmaceutical?

thallium stress test


What is diagnostic procedure uses a radiopharmaceutical to assess the patients heart function?

thallium test


Which diagnostic procedure uses a radiopharmaceutical to assess the patient's heart function?

thallium test


What stress test involves the use of radiopharmaceutical?

Thallium is the most common radiopharmaceutical used in nuclear medicine cardiac stress tests. Thallium shows how well blood travels through the heart in an active or stressful environment.


In which test is a radiopharmaceutical injected intravenously and traced within the vessels of the lung?

Perfusion study of the lung


What is the definintion of critical organ in nuclear medicine?

the organ (which may or may not be the target organ) that limits the adminstrative dose of the radiopharmaceutical due to the increased susceptibility of the critcal organ for cancer. For example, for a bone scan, the radiopharmaceutical is either Tc99m HDP or MDP, and the critical organ that limits the dose is the bladder.


What is the normal result of a salivary gland scan?

Normally functioning salivary glands take up the radiopharmaceutical then secrete it when stimulated by the lemon drops.


What are the advantages of radiopharmaceutical?

advantages are less comparitvly disadvantages because radiations may cause cancer when exposed fo long time for diagnostic purpose