What Is a Scintigraphy Camera?
- In the scinigraphy process, the patient is injected with a small amount of radioactive materials. Some time elapses, and the scintigraphy camera moves along the patient's body, taking several images of the focus area.
- The scinigraphy camera has a head containing flat planes of large crystal sodium iodide. When a gamma photon hits the crystal plane, it emits visible light.
- Photomultipliers in the camera pick up this visible light and convert the light occurrences into electrical signals, which are used by a connected computer to make an image. The placement and brightness of light in the final image can be used to detect where the gamma radiation is in the patient's body.
- Scintigraphy can be used for specific medical tests, such as a thyroid scintigraphy used to observe vital information about the thyroid gland or thrombocythaemia tests to review a person's spleen. They can examine the performance of a recently implanted artificial body part such as the heart.