130

Acta Radioldgica
Interamericana

M. BRUCER

By 1950 the National Bureau of Standards
in the United States in cooperation with
many other national bureaus had been able
to calibrate a sample of iodine with a high
degree of precision. This intercalibration was
on the basis of purely physical techniques
and was a laboratory procedure. The com-

are arbitrarily defined as anything under 100

kev; the low energies are defined as those

up to 250 kev; the medium energies are those up to 500 kev; and the high energies are

the rest of the spectrum. The high-energy

peak shown in the spectrum consists of two

gamma photons that are not very important
BABBITT METAL SHIELDS

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
“TOO THIN" AND
"TOO _——

.

;

.

No F (TH)
ENERGY SPECTRA
of
TODINE 131

“. on reain in glam

AND
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Na HT)

ENERGY SPECTRA
". FQOINE 131
ae:
— MOCK. IODINE

on resin in bobbirt

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“ONERGIER

:

.

‘HIGH -

ENERGIES

LecceeeROD kee. BS a ker,8thChore
Fig. 1. Comparison of the sodium ivdide speetra of iodine 131 and mock-iodine.

mittee decided in 1954 that one of the reasons for the wide variation in results was
the lack of a similar intercalibration stan-

dard that met clinical requirements. It was
felt that a clinical intercalibration procedure,

which would be adaptable to all the various

techniques in use, was necessary. Such a cli-

of Totat Area

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o

Ole

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0,3

xeRay
LOW
ENERGIES | ENERGIES
100 kaw

MEGIUM
ENERGIES

250 kev

‘hy

500 kev

sce
ENERGIES
$5th Channel

Fig. 2. The results of interposing succesive layers of
babbit metal between raw mock-iodine and the detecting crystal.

in thyroid uptake measurements because they
contribute so little to the total number of
counts recorded by most instruments. The
medium-energy peaks are the most promi-

to simulate the gamma-ray spectrum from

nent in the iodine spectrum. The low energy
peak consists mostly of Compton scattered
radiation. The peaks in the range arbitrarily
called X-rays energies consist both of photons emitted by the iodine and scatter from
interactions in both the instruments and the

mock-iodine are compared. In this figure it
is seen that when radioactive iodine is “view-

trum matches this iodine spectrum remarkably well. The high-energy peak is slightly
higher but this will not be picked up by
any instruments except complex spectrometers, which are seldom used for thyroid ra-

nical intercalibration demanded the use of
a long-lived isotope. The short half life of

radioactive todine was one of the main deterrents to clinical intercalibration.
A jong-lived gamma emitter can be made

iodine 131. This material is now called mockiodine and consists of the proper mixture of
barium 133 and cesium 137. In Fig. 1 the
sodium iodide spectra of iodine 131 and

ed” by a sodium iodide crystal, it emits a
number of gamma photonsof different energies. An arbitrary division has been made on
the spectrum to divide the energies emitted
into four classifications, The X-ray energies

surroounding media. The mock-iodine spec-

dioiodine uptake measurements. The medium-

energy peaks show the major difference between 10dine and mock-iodine. There is too
much of the 280 kev radiation and too little of the 360 kev radiation in mock-iodine.

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