ive looked in all the textbooks i could find but none seem to describe this dot point...some don't even mention the word metabolise. im quite confused about it, does anyone have a summary for this bit or could explain it to me? thanks.
This isn't true when irradiating thyroid gland tissue. As the thyroid requires a regular uptake of Iodine in order to synthesise thyroid hormones (due to T3 being composed of 2x tyrosine and 3x iodine and T4 being composed of 2x tyrosine and 4x iodine). Conveniently, 131I is a short-lived radioactive isotope of Iodine (half life of around 8 days) which produces both beta and gamma radiation (however the beta radiation is the workhorse emission here).Irskin said:Metabolism describes all of the chemical processes that occur inside the body. Radioactive isotopes such as Iodine-131, Fluorine-18, Technetium-99m, Oxygen-15 etc are attached to molecules that the body uses to maintain metabolic and physiological function.