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About PET
About PET
Positron Emission Tomography (PET) is a medical imaging
technology that allows physicians to visualize the body's
abnormal cellular activity. PET scans produce digital pictures
that can, in many cases, aid the physician in identifying
several forms of cancer, damaged heart tissue and brain disorders.
A PET scan is very different from ultrasound, X-ray, MRI, or CT scans,
which detect changes in the body structure or anatomy, such as a sizeable
tumor or musculoskeletal injury. A PET scan can help physicians distinguish
between living and dead tissue or between benign and malignant disorders,
whereas other imaging technologies merely confirm the presence of a mass.
Since a PET scan images the biology of disorders at the molecular level, it can help
the physician detect abnormalities in cellular activity at a very early stage,
generally before anatomic changes are visible. A PET scan can, in many cases,
help identify disease earlier and more specifically than ultrasound, X-ray, MRI or CT scans.
| PET Utilization |  The majority of PET scans are performed for oncologic applications. Physicians utilize
PET scans for diagnosing, staging and evaluating
treatments for their cancer patients.
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| Visualizing Disease |  In one continuous whole-body scan, PET captures images of
changes in the body's metabolism caused by actively growing cancer cells.
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