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Radiochemical methodology constitutes the most important base for
the successful functioning of a PET group in the routine production
and development of radiopharmaceuticals. Of the several hundred
products which have been labelled with positron emitters during the
past two decades about 35 are presently considered to be of major
interest. The time for a state-of-the-art review is right, since
this field has advanced over the past fifteen years to reach a
level where guidelines can now be suggested. Chapters of this book
deal with each of the main methodological aspects of the chemistry
needed to develop an effective radiopharmaceutical, namely
radionuclide production, automation and metabolite analysis. A
further chapter on QA/QC is written by a broadly-based expert group
and is meant to provide a guideline and a base for future
monographs and regulations on major PET radiopharmaceuticals of
today. This book will help the increasing numbers of scientists who
are now entering the field of PET to appreciate the methodological
aspects that are normally addressed by chemists in relation to PET
radiopharmaceuticals; it provides many useful practical guidelines
and will promote early success in their own endeavours, since these
will often necessarily begin by establishing chemical methodology
of the kind discussed here.
From Wilhelm Conrad Rontgen's search for new kinds of radiation
resulted the discovery of the natural radioactivity of uranium by
Antoine Henry Becquerel in 1896. This event opened a new era of
science that can be considered as the beginning of nuclear
sciences. The findings of Pierre and Marie Curie of radium and
polonium as useful radiation source subsequently opened the way to
the first applications of radiation in medicine. Over the decades
and still today radiation has found broad applications in many
fields of science and technology. Not only chemistry, physics,
biochemistry and medicine are using relevant applications of
radioactivity. Biochemistry, agriculture, cosmo- and geochemistry,
archaeology, geology also are fields where radiochemistry still is
gaining importance. This book gives a survey about the history and
modern aspects of radioactivity, new synthetic elements, and
applications of radioactivity."
Radiochemical methodology constitutes the most important base for
the successful functioning of a PET group in the routine production
and development of radiopharmaceuticals. Of the several hundred
products which have been labelled with positron emitters during the
past two decades about 35 are presently considered to be of major
interest. The time for a state-of-the-art review is right, since
this field has advanced over the past fifteen years to reach a
level where guidelines can now be suggested. Chapters of this book
deal with each of the main methodological aspects of the chemistry
needed to develop an effective radiopharmaceutical, namely
radionuclide production, automation and metabolite analysis. A
further chapter on QA/QC is written by a broadly-based expert group
and is meant to provide a guideline and a base for future
monographs and regulations on major PET radiopharmaceuticals of
today. This book will help the increasing numbers of scientists who
are now entering the field of PET to appreciate the methodological
aspects that are normally addressed by chemists in relation to PET
radiopharmaceuticals; it provides many useful practical guidelines
and will promote early success in their own endeavours, since these
will often necessarily begin by establishing chemical methodology
of the kind discussed here.
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