Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy

Abstract The year, 2016, marked the 75th anniversary of Dr. Saul Hertz first using radioiodine to treat a patient with thyroid disease. In November of 1936, a luncheon was held of the faculty of Harvard Medical School where Karl Compton, PhD, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology wa...

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Main Authors: Frederic H. Fahey, Frederick D. Grant, James H. Thrall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-04-01
Series:EJNMMI Physics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40658-017-0182-7
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spelling doaj-e5a3e3cad8dc4cc488e27a1a98f00f1b2020-11-24T23:29:03ZengSpringerOpenEJNMMI Physics2197-73642017-04-01411710.1186/s40658-017-0182-7Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapyFrederic H. Fahey0Frederick D. Grant1James H. Thrall2Department of Radiology, Harvard Medical SchoolDepartment of Radiology, Harvard Medical SchoolDepartment of Radiology, Harvard Medical SchoolAbstract The year, 2016, marked the 75th anniversary of Dr. Saul Hertz first using radioiodine to treat a patient with thyroid disease. In November of 1936, a luncheon was held of the faculty of Harvard Medical School where Karl Compton, PhD, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was invited to give a presentation entitled “What Physics Can Do for Biology and Medicine.” Saul Hertz who attended the luncheon spontaneously asked the very pertinent question that perhaps changed the course of treatment of thyroid disease, “Could iodine be made radioactive artificially?” We review the events leading up to the asking of this question, the preclinical investigations by Dr. Hertz and his colleague Arthur Roberts prior to the treatment of the first patient and what occurred in the years following this landmark event. This commentary seeks to set the record straight to the sequence of events leading to the first radioiodine therapy, so that those involved can be recognized with due credit.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40658-017-0182-7HistorySaul HertzRadioiodine therapy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frederic H. Fahey
Frederick D. Grant
James H. Thrall
spellingShingle Frederic H. Fahey
Frederick D. Grant
James H. Thrall
Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
EJNMMI Physics
History
Saul Hertz
Radioiodine therapy
author_facet Frederic H. Fahey
Frederick D. Grant
James H. Thrall
author_sort Frederic H. Fahey
title Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
title_short Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
title_full Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
title_fullStr Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
title_full_unstemmed Saul Hertz, MD, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
title_sort saul hertz, md, and the birth of radionuclide therapy
publisher SpringerOpen
series EJNMMI Physics
issn 2197-7364
publishDate 2017-04-01
description Abstract The year, 2016, marked the 75th anniversary of Dr. Saul Hertz first using radioiodine to treat a patient with thyroid disease. In November of 1936, a luncheon was held of the faculty of Harvard Medical School where Karl Compton, PhD, president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was invited to give a presentation entitled “What Physics Can Do for Biology and Medicine.” Saul Hertz who attended the luncheon spontaneously asked the very pertinent question that perhaps changed the course of treatment of thyroid disease, “Could iodine be made radioactive artificially?” We review the events leading up to the asking of this question, the preclinical investigations by Dr. Hertz and his colleague Arthur Roberts prior to the treatment of the first patient and what occurred in the years following this landmark event. This commentary seeks to set the record straight to the sequence of events leading to the first radioiodine therapy, so that those involved can be recognized with due credit.
topic History
Saul Hertz
Radioiodine therapy
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40658-017-0182-7
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