Video walkthrough · Nuclear Medicine

Nuclear Medicine Practice Test Video

Watch the Nuclear Medicine practice test video walkthrough, review the questions, download the free PDF and start an online mock exam.

Free sample · Nuclear MedicineQ1
Which detector type is most commonly used in a gamma camera?
Correct — B. NaI(Tl) crystals are the standard detector in Anger gamma cameras because of their high light output at 140 keV (the primary energy used in nuclear medicine) and well-established manufacturing. Semiconductor detectors like CZT are used in dedicated cardiac cameras but not the primary gamma camera platform.
↑ Tap an answer to check it
Watch & learn

Nuclear Medicine exam — full Q&A walkthrough

Every question read aloud with the answer explained. Play it on your commute, then test yourself.

Sample questions

Try Nuclear Medicine questions now

  1. Q1Which detector type is most commonly used in a gamma camera?

    Show answer

    ✓ Correct answer: Sodium iodide thallium-activated [NaI(Tl)]

    NaI(Tl) crystals are the standard detector in Anger gamma cameras because of their high light output at 140 keV (the primary energy used in nuclear medicine) and well-established manufacturing. Semiconductor detectors like CZT are used in dedicated cardiac cameras but not the primary gamma camera platform.

    Open the full explanation page →

  2. Q2A parallel-hole collimator is used for a bone scan. What is the primary advantage of this collimator type?

    Show answer

    ✓ Correct answer: Maintains image size independent of source-to-collimator distance

    Parallel-hole collimators produce an image that is the same size as the object regardless of distance, making them ideal for whole-body imaging. Converging collimators magnify, diverging collimators minify, and pinhole collimators magnify only small fields of view.

    Open the full explanation page →

  3. Q3A NaI(Tl) gamma camera has a measured photopeak FWHM of 21 keV at 140 keV. What is the percent energy resolution?

    Show answer

    ✓ Correct answer: 15.0%

    Percent energy resolution = (FWHM / photopeak energy) × 100 = (21 / 140) × 100 = 15%. Typical NaI(Tl) cameras achieve 9–12% at 140 keV; 15% indicates some degradation but is still within broad acceptance limits.

    Open the full explanation page →

  4. Q4Intrinsic spatial resolution of a gamma camera is measured WITHOUT the collimator. Which factor most directly degrades intrinsic resolution?

    Show answer

    ✓ Correct answer: Statistical spread of light photons in the crystal

    Intrinsic resolution is limited primarily by the statistical spread of scintillation photons within the NaI crystal, which creates uncertainty in locating the interaction. PMT diameter and electronics also contribute, but the photon statistics in the crystal are the dominant factor for intrinsic resolution.

    Open the full explanation page →

  5. Q5For imaging high-energy photons (e.g., 364 keV from I-131), which collimator is required?

    Show answer

    ✓ Correct answer: High-energy general purpose (HEGP)

    I-131 emits 364 keV photons, which require thick septa to prevent penetration. High-energy general purpose (HEGP) collimators have thick lead septa designed for photon energies above ~300 keV. LEHR is for Tc-99m (140 keV) only.

    Open the full explanation page →

  6. Q6What is the primary function of the photomultiplier tube (PMT) in a gamma camera?

    Show answer

    ✓ Correct answer: Convert light photons from the scintillator into an amplified electrical signal

    PMTs detect the faint light (scintillation photons) produced when gamma rays interact in the NaI(Tl) crystal and amplify that light via successive dynode stages into a measurable electrical pulse. Position determination uses the relative outputs of multiple PMTs (Anger logic).

    Open the full explanation page →

Unlock everything

Full Nuclear Medicine bank + unlimited mocks

Try 30 questions free. Unlock the complete Nuclear Medicine question bank, every explanation, and unlimited timed mock exams. Practice on any device.

Unlock Nuclear Medicine →
Cramming?
$2.99
/ week · per exam
Best value
$6.99
/ month · per exam