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Gallium
Gallium is a metal with the chemical symbol Ga and atomic number 31. Gallium salts such as gallium citrate and gallium nitrate (with the radioactive isotope 67Ga) are used as radiopharmaceuticals in diagnostic nuclear medicine procedures, for example abscess or inflammation scintigraphy.
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Gamma Quantum
A gamma quantum is a distinct photon of electromagnetic radiation with the highest energy, shortest wavelength. The energy of a single photon is above 100 keV, the wavelength is below about 10 picometers. Gamma photons are generated by processes within the atomic nuclei.

See also Quantum.
Gamma Ray
Gamma rays are a form of nuclear radiation that consists of photons emitted by radioactive elements from the nucleus. This high energetic light emission is also produced from subatomic particle interaction, such as electron positron annihilation. Gamma radiation, similar to x-radiation can injure and destroy tissue, especially cell nuclei.
Gamma rays have in general very high frequencies, short wavelengths, are electrically neutral and penetrate matter. The interaction of gamma rays with matter depends on the nature of the absorber as well as the energy of the gamma rays; these interactions determine also the type and amount of shielding needed for radiation protection.

See also Radiation Safety, Lead Equivalence, Lead Apron, Leaded Glove, Glove-Box, Radioactive Decay Law and Radiation Worker.
Gantry
The gantry is a ring-shaped structure, containing the x-ray tube, collimators, filters, data acquisition system (DAS), associated electronics such as gantry angulation motors, rotational components including slip ring systems and the detector array in a CT or radiation therapy system. The table control, to regulate the gantry tilt and laser (or high intensity) lights are included within, or mounted on the gantry serving as anatomical positioning guides. To scan the patient, the patient table is moved through the gantry aperture.
The rotating arm on which an accelerator head is mounted is also called gantry. This gantry can rotate 360 degrees around its axis.
Gated Blood Pool Scintigraphy
(GBPS) The gated blood pool scintigraphy is an examination to evaluate the ventricular performance. This scintigraphic blood pool imaging uses an electrocardiographic synchronizer or gating device to acquire data during repeated heart cycles at specific times in the heart cycle. Radionuclides, for example 99mTc-humanserumalbumin (HSA), are used as intravascular tracers.
GBPS allows to determinate the left ventricular function with heart minute volume, ejection fraction (EF) at rest and under exercise. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) versus planar scintigraphic imaging improves cardiac evaluation due to the three dimensional nature. The GBPS method is not suitable to analyze the right ventricular function; that is best evaluated by first-pass ventriculography.
Echocardiography vs. GBPS has important disadvantages due to problems in quantitative evaluation, in patients with anatomic variations and dyskinetic left ventricles.

See also Myocardial Perfusion Imaging.
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 [last update: 2023-11-06 02:01:00]