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  2. Technetium-99m - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technetium-99m

    Technetium-99m (Tc-99m) can be readily detected in the body by medical equipment because it emits 140.5 keV gamma rays (these are about the same wavelength as emitted by conventional X-ray diagnostic equipment), and its half-life for gamma emission is six hours (meaning 94% of it decays to 99 Tc in 24 hours). Besides, it emits virtually no beta ...

  3. Technetium-99 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technetium-99

    The metastable technetium-99m (99m Tc) is a short-lived (half-life about 6 hours) nuclear isomer used in nuclear medicine, produced from molybdenum-99. It decays by isomeric transition to technetium-99, a desirable characteristic, since the very long half-life and type of decay of technetium-99 imposes little further radiation burden on the body.

  4. Technetium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technetium

    Technetium scintigraphy of a neck of Graves' disease patient. Technetium-99m ("m" indicates that this is a metastable nuclear isomer) is used in radioactive isotope medical tests. For example, technetium-99m is a radioactive tracer that medical imaging equipment tracks in the human body.

  5. Technetium-99m generator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technetium-99m_generator

    A Tc-99m pertechnetate solution is being eluted from Mo-99 molybdate bound to a chromatographic substrate. A technetium-99m generator, or colloquially a technetium cow or moly cow, is a device used to extract the metastable isotope 99m Tc of technetium from a decaying sample of molybdenum-99.

  6. Pertechnetate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pertechnetate

    In particular it is used to carry the 99m Tc isotope (half-life 6 hours) which is commonly used in nuclear medicine in several nuclear scanning procedures. Pertechnetate is poorly hydrated as [TcO 4 (H 2 O) n ] − and [TcO 4 (H 2 O) n-m ] − [H 3 O] + m (n = 1–50, m = 1–4) clusters that have been demonstrated by simulation with DFT.

  7. Isotopes of technetium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isotopes_of_technetium

    Technetium (43 Tc) is one of the two elements with Z < 83 that have no stable isotopes; the other such element is promethium. [2] It is primarily artificial, with only trace quantities existing in nature produced by spontaneous fission (there are an estimated 2.5 × 10 −13 grams of 99 Tc per gram of pitchblende) [3] or neutron capture by molybdenum.

  8. Technetium (99mTc) sestamibi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technetium_(99mTc)_sestamibi

    Technetium (99m Tc) sestamibi is a lipophilic cation which, when injected intravenously into a patient, distributes in the myocardium proportionally to the myocardial blood flow. Single photon emission computed tomography imaging of the heart is performed using a gamma camera to detect the gamma rays emitted by the technetium-99m as it decays.

  9. DPD scan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DPD_scan

    A DPD scan is a type of nuclear medicine imaging test which uses radioactive technetium-99m (99m Tc) and 3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propanodicarboxylic acid (DPD) to diagnose cardiac amyloidosis. The radiopharmaceutical is taken up only in patients with ATTR amyloidosis, making it a useful tool to differentiate from AL amyloidosis. [1]