What are the benefits of nuclear medicine?
Nuclear Medicine enables doctors to produce a quick, accurate diagnosis of a wide range of conditions and diseases in a person of any age. This is because information gathered using a nuclear medicine technique is much more comprehensive than other imaging procedures since it describes organ function, not just structure. The result is that many diseases and cancers can be diagnosed much earlier. This allows the appropriate treatment to begin as early as possible, which means it has a far greater chance of being fully effective. In addition, the tests are painless and most scans expose patients to only minimal amounts of radiation. In fact, nuclear medicine procedures utilize only very small doses of short-lived isotopes (ones that only stay radioactive for a few hours or days), thus the amount of radiation received is generally less than or equal to that of an x-ray. Whole body and healthy tissue doses can be minimized while the radioisotope is targeted toward the affected tissue or organ.
Nuclear medicine therapy involves the use of medical isotopes for the treatment of thyroid and prostate cancer, hyperthyroidism, cancer bone pain, and polycythaemia (abnormal red cell and blood increase). Some researchers predict that over 80% of cancer types should be treatable with radioisotopes. In Europe, it is being used to treat arthritis although the U.S. FDA has not yet approved radioisotope treatments for arthritis.
Central to the progress of new radioisotope treatments has been the invention of unique and effective "delivery systems" which enable physicians to point the selected isotope directly at the diseased tissue. One of these is called radioimmunotherapy. In this technique, radioisotopes are attached to antibodies with a specific affinity for certain cells in the body. The antibodies guide the isotope to the cancer cells where the radioisotope then destroys them.
Cancer therapies involving radioisotopes may well lead the way into a new future for millions around the world who would have otherwise been given little or no hope. The Nuclear Medicine Research Council is proud to facilitate greater awareness of these promising developments