
PET scan pioneered at Mass General
In 1970, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) researchers in the Physics Research Laboratory, under Dr. Gordon Brownell, utilized 2D arrays of NaI crystals to create the “Positron Camera I” (PC-I), designed in 1968 and active around 1969–1970, which produced early tomograms.
Dr. Brownell and neurosurgeon William Sweet pioneered the use of positron-emitting tracers for medical imaging in the early 1950s at MGH.
MGH work was instrumental in developing detector technology and tracer applications that transitioned PET from a concept to a practical imaging tool.
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Source: National Library of Medicine
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