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Radionuclide
Radionuclides are naturally occurring or artificially produced atoms with unstable nuclei. Therefore radionuclides undergo a radioactive decay, and emit gamma ray(s) and/or subatomic particles.
Radionuclides are used as agents in nuclear medicine and to destroy tumors in cancer therapy.

See Isotope and Radioactive Decay.
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Generator
A generator is used in nuclear medicine to provide a radioisotope used for a scintigraphic procedure. A generator contains a radionuclide (e.g. molybdenum) that decays to another radionuclide (decay product, e.g. technetium) that can be extracted and used. The original radionuclide is firmly bound in the generator and remains behind.

See also Eluate
Beta Radiation
Beta radiation consists of high energetic electrons or positrons emitted spontaneously from nuclei in decay of some radionuclides. Also called beta particle and sometimes shortened to beta (e.g., beta-emitting radionuclides). Beta radiation is used for example in cancer treatment.
The average reach of beta radiation in tissue is 3.5 mm.

See also Beta Decay.
Gamma Radiation
Gamma radiation is electromagnetic radiation emitted in decay of radionuclides. Also called gamma ray and sometimes shortened to gamma (e.g., gamma-emitting radionuclides).
Half-Life
[Also: Half-Life Time, Radioactive Half-Life] The half-life is the time in which half the atoms (always a fraction, not a number) of a given radionuclide disintegrate from the amount of atoms present when measurement starts. From 200 atoms of a radionuclide with a half-life of one minute will 100 atoms disintegrate in the first minute, 50 in the second minute, etc. The half-life is a characteristic property of radioactive isotopes. The effective half-life includes all processes of elimination, including radioactive decay.
Different half-life terms:
- Physical Radioactive Half-Life
- Biological Radioactive Half-Life
- Effective Radioactive Half-Life.

See also Decay Constant, Decay.
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