- Gamma radiation measurements and Monte Carlo computations following myocardial perfusion imaging with 201Tl.
Gamma radiation measurements and Monte Carlo computations following myocardial perfusion imaging with 201Tl.
In the current study, the time-dependent retention of (201)Tl-thallous chloride (111 MBq) was measured in a 56-y-old man undergoing myocardial perfusion imaging. For 23 d following the (201)Tl injection, total-body retained activity was measured by (i) in situ gamma spectrometry using a portable high-purity germanium (HPGe) detector and (ii) ex vivo urine radioassay using a shielded HPGe detector. The time-dependent decrease in total-body activity followed a monoexponential function, exp(-0.011 t), with an excellent correlation (R(2)=0.9988) between the experimental data and the fitted values. The effective half-life, Teff, of (201)Tl (physical half-life, Tph: 72.9 h) was therefore 63 h and the biological half-life, Tb, 463 h=19.3 d, identical to those measured in the same patient in 1997 (i.e. 14 y ago). The time-dependent decrease in the urine activity concentration, which followed a monoexponential function, exp(-0.0115 t), corroborated the foregoing results. The correlation (R(2)=0.9939) between the experimental data and the fitted values was again excellent. The effective half-life, Teff, was 60.26 h and the biological half-life, Tb, 348 h=14.5 d. Monte Carlo simulation using a simple model of the patient as a unit-density cylinder filled with water and containing a uniform distribution of (201)Tl yielded photon flux results in reasonable agreement with the measured data.