Welcome Rutgers SHRP NM Students!!!

Navigate through our intriguing clinical case studies and up to date scans in our growing Nuclear Medicine field. Learn what it means to be a Nuclear Medicine Technologist. Learn how the affiliated sites help students become well rounded technologists. Experience and explore the wonderful field that is Nuclear Medicine!!!

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Quality Control Troublshooting

We have three cameras in my department. I completed the first intrinsic flood (2million counts) when I noticed the uniformity on detector 2 was not good. I decided to move on to the next camera and come back to determine the problem, since the pattern was not typical of most non-uniformity problems.

The second camera demonstrated a similar, but more intense non-uniformity issue with detector 2. Coincidence... Now I had to determine the problem. I removed the source from the area and started a uniformity flood without a source to see if there was contamination in the area. A previous episode had a hot needle in a nearby sharps container. This time nothing was initially found.

I then checked my discarded gloves, which I Usually place on top of the collimator cart after placing the source and removing them...
In the first room my gloves were placed at the back of the collimator cart, so the activity on the glove was attenuated by the cart. In the second room, to which I carried my gloves (I dispose of them in the hot lab after completion of acquiring all morning uniformities) and had placed them at the front of the cart. Without the attenuation from the cart, the "extra" source is predominant in the acquired image...

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.