407841
APARTADO DEL ACTA RADIOLOGICA INTERAMERICANA

VOLUMEN VII

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3--f

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(

1957

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Radioiodine Uptake Measurement
MARSHALL BRUCER, M. D.1

URING the past decade radioiodine upDrake measurements have become a very
popular and widely used procedure. Currently the largest portion of the total number

of shipments of radioisotopes that are made
from Oak Ridge are radioiodine. This totals
a little less than one curie per month. It is
estimated that about two thirds of about G000
shipments per month are ultimately used for
thyroid radioiodine uptake measurements.

About 1800 physicians are doing thyroid

radioiodine studies in the United States alone.
The procedure is therefore an important one
but its reliability has been questioned.
At a meeting in Oak Ridge in 1953, a

group of internists discussed the validity of

these measurements and set up a committee
to study the problem. This is known as the
Thyroid Uptake Calibration Committee of
ORINS. The committee set out initially to
answer one question: Is there a significant

variation in thyroid uptage measurements as
currently perfomed throughout the world?

Even before the surveywas complete, the answer to this question was obvious. Variation
in thyroid uptake measurements among laboratories is significant. This paper is a report on the survey and the extension of the
committee’s work toward a methodof calibration.
There are many reasons for believing that

measurements of thyroid uptake might show

considerable variation. Almost every physi-

clan is using a different combination of standards, instruments, distances, techniqués, and
formulas for measuring thyroid uptake. The

standards currently in use range from point

sources to milk-bottle-sized containers. The
instruments used range from Geiger-Muller
end-window tubes hastily connected with out-

moded scalers to the newestscintillation crystals on automatic scanners. When the various

methods used for calculating thyroid uptake
are surveyed, there should be no question
of variation of results. The surprising thing
is thar there is any useful unanimity of opinion.

1 Chairman, The Medical Division Oak Ridke Instituteof Nuclear Studies Oak Ridge, Tennessee. (Under Contract with the United States Atomic Energy Comission.)

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