RADIOIODINE UPTAKE MEASUREMENT

Vol. VII, N° 3-4

and was subtracted from both the measure-

ment over the patient and the measuremnt
over the standard.

.

The A formula:

_ Py — RB,

TU = —RB,

In this formula an “A-filter”, usually a thin
piece of lead, was interposed between the patient’s neck and the detector but was placed
very close to the detector.
The B formula:

TU = ——

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method is so similar to the 0 formula method. it was dropped from any further consideration.

In many laboratories, very complex formulas interposed factors (or even fudge fac-

tors) that sometimes resulted in very accurate

thyroid uptake measurements. In most instances these fudge factors were valid only
for certain kinds of patients, usually the

very high thyroid-uptake, very low bodybackground patients. In a number of instances
very complex formulas were intimately associated with very complex and unusual designs of instruments. Since these instruments

In this formula a thyroid eclipsing shield
was used. These may have been of manydifferent sizes and shapes but were always pla-

were available to very few laboratories (and
most persons doing thyroid uptake measure-

ly at a distance from the detector. Here a

ped from further consideration.
With the four type-formulas applied to
almost every kind of instrumentation under
almost every kind of thyroid uptake circumstance and in many different kinds of patients,
it was found that a generalized statement of
error could be made.
Among those persons who used instruments in which there was a high degree of
control of the spectrum (and this includes

ced very close to the patient’s neck and usual-

measurement was taken over the patient with-

out a filter and another measurement was
taken with the filter in place. The measurement with thefilter was substracted from the
measurement without the filter. This results
in a kind of body-background correction.
The AB formula:

Py — Pas

TU =="
Ss — Sap

This is the formula that was devised after
extensive study. It is a method that has been
used in very few laboratories but is the formula that showed the best answers underall
Another very common formula was used
to measure thyroid uptake. It was a formula that involved the subtraction of a thig
measurement or of some other kind of measurement to correct for body background.
The results from laboratories using the thigh
correction and similar results with this kind
of a body-backgroundcorrection in the ORINS
laboratory were so exceedingly poor that this
method has been dropped from all further

consideration. Another method that was very

commonly used was a very simple one in
which no correction was made for body background or for room background. Since this

ment could not even dream of obtaining
them), these complex formulas were drop-

all the spectrometers and also those instruments that had good discriminator control)

the degree fo control over the spectrum accounted for the lion’s share of the variation
in thyroid uptake measurements under any
one circumstance. Where the spectrometer
control excluded all scattered radiation, the
results of the measurement were usually very
good. Where the spectrometer control included scattered radiation, the results of the

measurement were invariably very poor.
About three quarters of the error could be
accounted for on the basis of the control of
the spectrum seen by the detector.
Even with very good spectrometer control
it is possible to make significant errors in
the thyroid uptake. The most significant factor is the adoption of an improper phantom.
One of the primary things that a phantom

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