Positron Emission Tomography
En Español (Spanish Version)
This test makes images that show activity in body tissues. A substance that gives off a tiny amount of radiation is put into your body. This substance goes to the part of you body that is most active. A machine can then detect where that substance is. PET can be done for many body parts, including:
- Whole body
- Brain
- Lungs
- Breast
- Heart
PET Scans of the Brain
© 2011 Nucleus Medical Media, Inc.
If you are allergic to the radioactive substance given for a PET scan, you may be at risk for complications. Talk to your doctor.
A PET scan may be done for a number of reasons, including:
- Looking for tumors or assessing tumor level of activity after treatment
- Assessing causes of memory disorders
- Finding the cause of seizures and helping to find treatments
-
Assessing brain metabolism in patients with
chronic fatigue syndrome
- Looking for heart disease
- Wear comfortable clothes.
- Do not eat or drink anything, except water, for at least four hours before the scan.
- Check with your doctor about taking your regular medicines.
-
If you have
diabetes
, ask the doctor for specific diet recommendations for the test day, since this can affect your results.
- Tell your doctor if you are or might be pregnant.
A nurse or technologist will give you a radioactive substance. This may be done through an injection, or in some cases, you will be asked to breathe in a gas. It will travel through your blood to the area of the body being studied. It takes 30-90 minutes for the substance to be absorbed by the tissue. Once the substance has been absorbed, the scan can take place.
You will lie on a table and be moved into a machine that looks like a large, square doughnut. This machine detects and records the energy levels from the substance that was injected earlier. The images are viewed on a computer monitor. The scan lasts about 30-45 minutes. You may be asked to perform specific tasks before or during the test. For example, during a heart PET scan, you may be asked to walk on a treadmill.
Drink plenty of fluids to help the radioactive substance pass from your body.
At least two hours
Except for the pinprick from the injection, a PET scan is a painless procedure. People who are
claustrophobic
(uncomfortable in closed or tight spaces) may have some
anxiety
.
The images will show activity levels as different colors or degrees of brightness. A radiologist will review the images and send the results to your doctor. It may take a few days for your doctor to receive the report.
Call your doctor if you have any unusual symptoms, like a rash, itching, or difficulty breathing. These symptoms may mean that you are having an allergic reaction to the radioactive substance.
Society of Nuclear Medicine
The College of Family Physicians of Canada
Goroll AH, Mulley AG.
Primary Care Medicine
. 4th ed. Boston, MA: Lippincott, Williams, and Wilkins; 2000.
National Institutes of Health website. Available at:
http://www.nih.gov/
.
Accessed July 22, 2009.
Radiological Society of North America website. Available at:
http://www.rsna.org/
. Accessed July 22, 2009.
Last Reviewed September 2011