Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus

The objective of this project is to investigate the production of Positron-Emission-Tomography (PET) [II isotopes (11C, 13N, 150, 18F) in the dense plasma focus. We aim to test the feasibility of replacing costly present-day cyclotron isotope production facilities for PET, with simpler, cheaper and...

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Main Author: S. V. Springham
Other Authors: National Institute of Education
Format: Research Report
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/42321
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-423212020-11-01T06:06:43Z Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus S. V. Springham National Institute of Education DRNTU::Science::Medicine::Optical instruments The objective of this project is to investigate the production of Positron-Emission-Tomography (PET) [II isotopes (11C, 13N, 150, 18F) in the dense plasma focus. We aim to test the feasibility of replacing costly present-day cyclotron isotope production facilities for PET, with simpler, cheaper and easily maintainable repetitive plasma focus devices. PET is a rapidly growing bio-medical imaging modality. It is now well established as an essential imaging technique in the fields of oncology, cardiology and neurology. Some common diagnostic applications of PET imaging are given in the table below. PET scanners produce three-dimensional images of radio-pharmaceuticals that have been injected into a patient prior to the scan. These radio-pharmaceuticals are labeled with a positron emitting isotope - usually 11C, 13N, 150, or 18F. The half-lives of these isotopes are short – ranging from 2 to 110 minutes - hence the production of isotopes must be local to the PET facility, The principle underlying PET is that each emitted positron annihilates with an electron creating two gamma-rays travelling in diametrically opposite directions from the point of origin (where the radiopharmaceutical s is localized). From the positions of these detected gamma-ray pairs the three dimensional image of the radio-pharmaceutical distribution in the patient is reconstructed. RP 2/05 2010-11-01T07:42:44Z 2010-11-01T07:42:44Z 2008 2008 Research Report http://hdl.handle.net/10356/42321 en 14 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Medicine::Optical instruments
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Medicine::Optical instruments
S. V. Springham
Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
description The objective of this project is to investigate the production of Positron-Emission-Tomography (PET) [II isotopes (11C, 13N, 150, 18F) in the dense plasma focus. We aim to test the feasibility of replacing costly present-day cyclotron isotope production facilities for PET, with simpler, cheaper and easily maintainable repetitive plasma focus devices. PET is a rapidly growing bio-medical imaging modality. It is now well established as an essential imaging technique in the fields of oncology, cardiology and neurology. Some common diagnostic applications of PET imaging are given in the table below. PET scanners produce three-dimensional images of radio-pharmaceuticals that have been injected into a patient prior to the scan. These radio-pharmaceuticals are labeled with a positron emitting isotope - usually 11C, 13N, 150, or 18F. The half-lives of these isotopes are short – ranging from 2 to 110 minutes - hence the production of isotopes must be local to the PET facility, The principle underlying PET is that each emitted positron annihilates with an electron creating two gamma-rays travelling in diametrically opposite directions from the point of origin (where the radiopharmaceutical s is localized). From the positions of these detected gamma-ray pairs the three dimensional image of the radio-pharmaceutical distribution in the patient is reconstructed.
author2 National Institute of Education
author_facet National Institute of Education
S. V. Springham
format Research Report
author S. V. Springham
author_sort S. V. Springham
title Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
title_short Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
title_full Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
title_fullStr Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
title_full_unstemmed Ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
title_sort ion-beam studies and isotope production using dense plasma focus
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/42321
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