Our purpose in the present publication is to determine the cost-benefit relation of the Schilling test used to measure the intestinal absorption of radioactive vitamin B12. The 60Co-B12 urinary excretion Schilling test was first reported in 1953, and five years later it was being performed at the National Institute of Nutrition (INNSZ) in Mexico City. It was performed in its original version until 1969 and from 1970 to 1980, the direct absorption was measured with a whole-body counter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn nuclear medicine, the search for the perfect hepatobiliary agent started in 1955 with the rose bengal dye labeled with 131I. With the advent of technetium-99m, many ligands were labeled and Tc-99m-PG and 99mTc-HIDA were among the best suited for this purpose. Both were synthesized at the radiopharmacy laboratory during 1977-1980 and have been used at INNSZ for clinical studies.
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