Re: Cancer Patient Sets Off Port Radiation Alarmsfredfighter@spamcop,net wrote:
> I was more than a little surprised at this article:
>
> http :// www .wsbtv,com /health/10853509/detail.html
>
> It is short on details so I am still wondering just what
> it was that was detected, assuming the story is not
> a hoax.
>
> Do any knowledgable people care to take a guess as
> to what may have been detected?
>
> Possibilities that occur to me include a tracer she may
> have received for imaging purposes, or an implant placed
> directly into a tumor (do they do that any more?)
>
> Could she have receive radioiodine treatment for an
> enlarged thyroid, rather than cancer therapy?
>
> --
>
> FF
>
I didn't read the article but yes, this can (and does) happen. If we
find out that a patient is crossing the border within the next few days,
or traveling to an airport, we give them a standard letter explaining
that they were injected with technetium or given oral iodine.
Most of the time it is with truck drivers who regularly cross into the
US. In the fall we also have a lot of "snowbirds" heading South.
I don't know how sensitive the detectors are, but the thought of some 70
year old grandmother having her car torn apart simply because she had a
bone scan the day before doesn't appeal to me.
Andrew