Medical Uses of Radiation (OCR Gateway GCSE Physics)

Revision Note

Test Yourself
Joanna

Author

Joanna

Expertise

Physics

Medical Uses of Radiation

Medical Tracers

  • A tracer is a radioactive isotope that can be used to track the movement of substances, like blood, around the body
  • Gamma emitters are usually used for this purpose
    • Gamma rays are highly penetrating and so will be able to pass through the body and be detected outside the body

  • This allows an internal image of the body to be created

Iodine-131 is an example of a radioactive tracer

  • Since gamma rays are less ionising than some other forms of radiation, the harm caused to the patient is also minimised
  • As well as choosing a gamma emitter:
    • The amount of isotope used is kept to a minimum to reduce people’s exposure to radiation
    • Isotopes are chosen that have short half-lives of around a few hours: Long enough to carry out the procedure, but not so long that they cause long term harm

Radiotherapy

  • Radiotherapy is the name given to the treatment of cancer using radiation
  • Although radiation can cause cancer, it is also highly effective at treating it
  • Radiation can kill living cells
    • Some cells, such as bacteria and cancer cells, are more susceptible to radiation than others

  • During external radiotherapy, beams of gamma rays are directed at the cancerous tumour
    • Surrounding healthy tissue tends to be shielded to avoid causing any damage

Radiation Therapy 1, downloadable AS & A Level Physics revision notes

During radiotherapy, the beams are moved around to minimise harm to healthy tissue whilst still being aimed at the tumour

  • During internal radiotherapy, small pellets of radioactive materials can also be inserted into a tumour exposing it directly to radiation

Risks of Using Radioactivity

  • The use of radiation in medicine carries risk
  • Radiation can:
    • Kill or damage living cells
    • Cause cancer
    • Cause mutations

  • As a result, its use needs to be kept to a minimum
  • However, the benefits of using radiation in medicine can out way the potential risks
    • The risks posed by the radiation are smaller than the risks associated with leaving the condition untreated

  • For example, if a person has a cancerous tumour that is likely to kill them, then it is less of a risk to use radiotherapy than to leave the tumour

Sterilising Medical Equipment

  • Gamma radiation is widely used to sterilise medical equipment
  • Gamma is most suited to this because:
    • It is the most penetrating out of all the types of radiation
    • It is penetrating enough to irradiate all sides of the instruments
    • Instruments can be sterilised without removing the packaging

Worked example

A new medical tracer is required for investigating the absorption of a particular substance found in blood around the body.Tracer examples, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notesWhich of the different isotopes in the table would be most suitable?

ANSWER:  C

    • A suitable medical tracer must:
      • Be able to penetrate out of the body
      • Have a long enough half-life to move around the body before it decays away
      • Have a short enough half-life that it won’t remain in the body at dangerous levels for too long

    • The answer is not A because alpha radiation cannot penetrate out of the body
    • The answer is not B because the half-life is too short
    • The answer is not D because the half-life is too long

Exam Tip

You may be given data and asked to evaluate the risk of nuclear radiation in a particular example. Remember to compare the potential dangers with the benefits.

You've read 0 of your 0 free revision notes

Get unlimited access

to absolutely everything:

  • Downloadable PDFs
  • Unlimited Revision Notes
  • Topic Questions
  • Past Papers
  • Model Answers
  • Videos (Maths and Science)

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Joanna

Author: Joanna

Joanna obtained her undergraduate degree in Natural Sciences from Cambridge University and completed her MSc in Education at Loughborough University. After a decade of teaching and leading the physics department in a high-performing academic school, Joanna now mentors new teachers and is currently studying part-time for her PhD at Leicester University. Her passions are helping students and learning about cool physics, so creating brilliant resources to help with exam preparation is her dream job!