Medical imaging
The emissions from the decay of beta participles and gamma waves are commonly used in medical imaging. Rubidium-82 and strontium-82 are used for PET (positron emission tomography) imaging, gamma rays used in x-rays and technetium-99 which is the most common radioisotope, according to the World Nuclear Associations statistic of ‘85% of diagnostic scans in nuclear medicine worldwide’. (World Nuclear Association, 2021)
This is mainly due to their short half-life, meaning they remain in the patient’s body during the specific procedure and eventually decay afterwards. (McCarthy and Thomas, n.d., p. 577)
Radiation sterilisation leaves no residue and can be performed directly in the packaging.
Sterilisation, radiotherapy and radioactive tracers
The use of radiation in medicine can be summarised into three overarching uses; sterilisation, radiotherapy and radioactive tracers.

