Nuclear
Medicine
Nuclear medicine began approximately 50 years ago and has
evolved into a major medical specialty for both diagnosis and
therapy of serious disease. More than 3,900 hospital-based nuclear
medicine departments in the United States perform over 10 million
nuclear medicine imaging and therapeutic procedures each year.
Despite its integral role in patient care, nuclear medicine is still
often confused with other imaging procedures, including general
radiology, CT, and MRI.
Nuclear medicine studies document organ and function and structure,
in contrast to conventional radiology, which creates images based
upon anatomy. Many of the nuclear medicine studies can measure the
degree of function present in an organ, often times eliminating the
need for surgery. Moreover, nuclear medicine procedures often
provide important information that allows the physician to detect
and treat a disease early in its course when there may be more
success. It is nuclear medicine that can best be used to study the
function of a damaged heart or restriction of blood flow to parts of
the brain. The liver, kidneys, thyroid gland, and many other organs
are similarly imaged.
Bombay Hospital & Lilavati Hospital are among the most
recognized center in Mumbai and has strived to provide the best
of the treatment and always has looked out to incorporate the
latest techniques and technology in Nuclear Medicines.
Our nuclear medicine department offers a wide spectrum of
Radionuclide imaging procedures and some of its applications are
given below:
++ High risk patients having strong family history of
heart disease/ DM/ Hypertension.
++ Equivocal/ false Treadmill test.
++ To rule out impending ischemia in other territories
for future cardiac events in
patients recovering from acute MI.
++ For assessment of viable myocardium in patients with
old MI.
++ Follow up of patients who have undergone CABG/Post
angioplasty
++ To evaluate ventricular dysfunction in patients
receiving CARDIO-TOXIC
drugs.
++ Liver Scan
++ Thyroid Scan
++ Gallium Scan
++ Pulmonary embolism (COPD) |