A gamma camera is a nuclear medicine device that detects gamma photons emitted by a radioactive tracer inside a patient's body and converts them into a two-dimensional image. Unlike X-ray imaging, which uses radiation transmitted through the body, gamma imaging relies on radiation emitted from within.
The patient is injected with a radiopharmaceutical — a radioactive isotope attached to a biologically active molecule. The tracer accumulates in specific tissues depending on its chemical properties. For example, technetium-99m is the most commonly used tracer, with a half-life of 6 hours and a gamma emission energy of 140 keV.
Gamma Camera Components
1. Collimator — A lead or tungsten plate containing thousands of narrow parallel channels. Since gamma photons cannot be focused by lenses, the collimator acts as a physical filter, allowing only photons travelling in near-parallel directions to pass through. This preserves spatial information. Narrower holes give higher resolution but reduce sensitivity; wider holes increase count rate at the cost of image sharpness.
2. Scintillator — A large crystal of thallium-doped sodium iodide, NaI(Tl). When a gamma photon enters the crystal, it interacts (via the photoelectric effect or Compton scattering) and produces a flash of visible light called a scintillation. The crystal must be thick enough to absorb most incoming gamma photons but not so thick that lateral light spread blurs the image.
3. Photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) — An array of PMTs sits behind the scintillator. Each PMT converts the faint light flash into an electrical signal and amplifies it enormously using a series of dynodes at increasing voltages. A single electron from the photocathode triggers a cascade producing millions of electrons. Because the light from one scintillation spreads across several PMTs, the relative signal strengths from each tube allow the system to calculate the position of the original gamma interaction.
4. Computer — Receives signals from the PMT array and processes them. It calculates the X- and Y-coordinates of each gamma event (using Anger logic), applies energy discrimination to reject scattered photons, and accumulates thousands of events into a position-intensity matrix that forms the image.
5. Display — The processed data is rendered as a 2D image, typically in greyscale. Brighter regions indicate greater tracer uptake (higher gamma activity); darker regions suggest reduced or absent uptake.
Energy discrimination is critical: the computer only accepts events with energies within a narrow window centred on the tracer's emission energy (e.g. 140 keV for Tc-99m). Photons that have been Compton-scattered in the body arrive with lower energy and are rejected, improving image quality.