Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - What is a molybdenum target?

What is a molybdenum target?

Molybdenum target is a very common breast examination method, similar to X-ray imaging. It is also a kind of radiation, and then it is irradiated to the glands of the breast, and options are made according to the different tissue densities in the breast.

It is relatively easy to find abnormalities in the breast, such as lumps or calcification, and it is particularly sensitive to very fine sediment-like calcification.

The full name of mammography is mammography, which is the simplest, most reliable and non-invasive method to diagnose breast diseases at present. Relatively painless, simple, high resolution and repeatable. The preserved image can be compared before and after, and it has been used as a routine examination at present. Its characteristic is that it can detect breast masses that doctors can't touch. Mammary molybdenum target has many advantages. First of all, it can be used as a relatively non-invasive examination method to observe the effects of various physiological periods on breast structure, such as menstrual cycle and endocrine changes, and can reliably diagnose benign lesions and malignant tumors of breast cancer. According to the readings of X-ray films, some precancerous lesions can be found. Pathological changes can be followed up after radiotherapy and chemotherapy to observe the curative effect.

In addition, molybdenum target for breast cancer is also a routine physical examination, and some hospitals regard it as a part of routine physical examination. For some elderly and high-risk women, regular molybdenum target examination is recommended.