Nuclear Medicine Technology
Nuclear medicine uses radioactive materials in the diagnosis and treatment of disease. Nuclear medicine technologists prepare and administer radiopharmaceutical materials, operate nuclear instruments, position patients for “imaging” procedures, perform lab tests and work up diagnostic data for physicians. Graduates of this program are eligible to take national registry examinations and Florida licensure for nuclear medicine technologists.
Courses
- AMH 2010 — Early American History
- AMH 2020 — Modern American History
- BSC 2085 — Human Anatomy and Physiology I
- BSC 2085L — Human Anatomy and Physiology Laboratory
- BSC 2086 — Human Anatomy and PhysiologyII
- BSC 2086L — Human Anatomy and Physiology II Laboratory
- CHM 1025 — Introductory Chemistry
- CHM 1025L — Introductory Chemistry Laboratory
- ENC 1101 — English Composition I
- MAC 1105 — College Algebra
- NMT 1002 — Introduction to Nuclear Medicine Technology
- NMT 1103 — Patient Care
- NMT 1534 — Instrumentation, Quality Control and Quality Assurance
- NMT 1613 — Nuclear Physics and Instrumental Applications
- NMT 1705L — Nuclear Medicine Laboratory I
- NMT 1706L — Nuclear Medicine Laboratory II
- NMT 1713 — Nuclear Medicine Methodology I
- NMT 1714 — Pathology and Immunology for the NMT
- NMT 1723 — Nuclear Medicine Methodology II
- NMT 1804 — Nuclear Medicine Practicum I
- NMT 1814 — Nuclear Medicine Practicum II
- NMT 2051L — Nuclear Medicine Data Analysis
- NMT 2061C — Nuclear Medicine Seminar
- NMT 2430 — Radiation Safety and Biology
- NMT 2733 — Nuclear Medicine Methodology III
- NMT 2775C — PET/CT and Cross Sectional Anatomy
- NMT 2824 — Nuclear Medicine Practicum III
- NMT 2910 — Advanced Topics and Research Methods
- PHY 1025 — Fundamentals of Physics
- PHY 1025L — Fundamentals of Physics Laboratory
- POS 2041 — American Government