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Skylight gamma camera

Manufactured by Philips
Sourced in United States

The Skylight gamma camera is a medical imaging device designed for nuclear medicine procedures. It is used to detect and measure gamma radiation emitted by radioactive substances within the body. The camera's core function is to produce images that can be used by healthcare professionals for diagnostic and treatment purposes.

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3 protocols using skylight gamma camera

1

Lymphoscintigraphy Imaging Protocol

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Lymphoscintigraphy was performed according to a procedure described in detail elsewhere.13 In short, 20 MBq technetium-99m–labeled human serum albumin (Tc-99m-HSA (Vasculocis; CIS Bio International, Paris, France) in 0.1 mL was injected in the finger web between the second and third fingers bilaterally and was followed immediately by dynamic imaging for 30 minutes. Sequential 300-second scans were performed every 30–45 minutes for 5 hours using a dual head Philips Skylight gamma camera equipped with low-energy, high-resolution collimators.
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2

Collimator Design Comparison of SPECT Systems

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Collimator design varies widely between manufacturers. Therefore collimators on a Discovery NMCT (GE), a Skylight gamma camera (Philips) and a Symbia Intevo Excel SPECT/CT (Siemens) were assessed (table 1). It should be noted that the Skylight camera had thicker crystals (5/8″) than the Discovery and Intevo (3/8″) models.
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3

Multimodal Imaging of Parathyroid Adenomas

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Patients received 20 MBq of 123I intravenously. Two hours later, 750 MBq of 99mTc-sestamibi was injected. SPECT/CT acquisition was started 10 minutes after the 99mTc-sestamibi administration. All SPECT/CT acquisitions were performed with Siemens Symbia T or Siemens Intevo T2 imaging systems (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany). Immediately after the SPECT/CT acquisition, a static pinhole image of the neck was acquired with a SKYLight gamma camera (Philips Healthcare, USA) or with Siemens Symbia or Intevo T2 systems (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany) beginning in 2015. All acquisition parameters are shown in Table 1.
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