1 / 10

Radiopharmaceuticals

Radiopharmaceuticals. Lab # 7. A radiopharmaceutical is a radioactive compound used for the diagnosis and therapeutic treatment of human diseases. In nuclear medicine nearly 95% of the radiopharmaceuticals are used for diagnostic purposes while the rest are used for therapeutic treatment.

stormy
Télécharger la présentation

Radiopharmaceuticals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radiopharmaceuticals Lab # 7

  2. A radiopharmaceutical is a radioactive compound used for the diagnosis and therapeutic treatment of human diseases. • In nuclear medicine nearly 95% of the radiopharmaceuticals are used for diagnostic purposes while the rest are used for therapeutic treatment. • Radiopharmaceuticals usually have minimal pharmacologic effect • In most cases they are used in tracer quantities.

  3. Ideal Radiopharmaceutical • Radiopharmaceuticals should possess some important characteristics • Administered to humans • Several limitations on the detection of radiations by currently available instruments

  4. Easy Availability • Should be easily produced • Inexpensive • Readily available in any nuclear medicine facility. • Complicated methods of production of radionuclides or labeled compounds increase the cost of the radiopharmaceutical. • The geographic distance between the user and the supplier also limits the availability of short-lived radiopharmaceuticals.

  5. Short Effective Half-Life • A radionuclide decays with a definite half-life which is called the physical half-life Tp (or t1/2) • The physical half-life is independent of any physicochemical condition • Radiopharmaceuticals administered to humans disappear from the biological system through fecal or urinary excretion, perspiration, or other mechanisms

  6. Short Effective Half-Life • This biologic disappearance of a radiopharmaceutical follows an exponential law similar to that of radionuclide decay • Every radiopharmaceutical has a biologic half-life (Tb) • The net or effective rate (λe) of the loss of radioactivity is then related to the physical decay constant λp and the biologic decay constant λb. • λ e = λp +‏ λb • Te =Tp X Tb Tp+Tb ‏

  7. Short Effective Half-Life • The physical half-life of 111In is 67 hr and the biologic half-life of 111In-DTPA used for measurement of the glomerular filtration rate is 1.5 hr. What is the effective half-life of 111In-DTPA? • 1.47 hr • Radiopharmaceuticals should have a relatively short effective half-life which should not be longer than the time necessary to complete the study in question

  8. Particle Emission • Radionuclides decaying by a- or b-particle emission should not be used as the label in diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals • Many b-emitting radionuclides such as 131I-iodinated compounds are often used for clinical studies

  9. High Target-to-Nontarget Activity Ratio • For any diagnostic study it is desirable that the radiopharmaceutical be localized preferentially in the organ under study • Activity from nontarget areas can obscure the structural details of the picture of the target organ. • Target-to-nontarget activity ratio should be large.

  10. Thank You

More Related