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The use of molecular sieves to produce point sources of radioactivity

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Published 16 January 2004 2004 IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation Dale L Bailey et al 2004 Phys. Med. Biol. 49 N21 DOI 10.1088/0031-9155/49/3/N02

0031-9155/49/3/N21

Abstract

We have used commercially available molecular sieves (zeolites) to adsorb radioactivity onto small (∼2.1 mm diameter) beads for use in various applications in nuclear medicine. Soaking the beads in [99mTc]-NaTcO4 solution of ∼3 GBq ml−1 for 1–2 min can produce point sources containing 3–6 MBq total. Radioactive uptake was strongly dependent on bead size. We have employed the sources for gamma camera uniformity and as point source markers for interactive identification of anatomical landmarks. Due to their small size (≪system spatial resolution), relatively high uptake and negligible scattering contribution they provide excellent devices with which to measure spatial resolution, detector uniformity and energy resolution. The molecular sieves are inexpensive and readily usable with both single photon and positron emitting radionuclides.

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10.1088/0031-9155/49/3/N02