This paper presents the results of measurements of
99m
Tc activity concentrations in indoor air in a nuclear medicine department and resulting estimated
99m
Tc intake by medical personnel.
99m
Tc air activity measurements were conducted at the Nuclear Medicine Department, John Paul II Hospital, Krakow, Poland, during ventilation–perfusion SPECT lung scans. Technetium from the air was collected by means of a mobile aerosol sampler with a Petryanov filter operating at an average flow rate of 10 dm
3
min
−1
. Measured activities ranged from 99 ± 11 to 6.1 ± 0.5 kBq m
−3
. The resulting daily average intake of
99m
Tc by medical staff was estimated to be 5.4 kBq, 4.4 kBq, 3.0 kBq and 2.5 kBq, respectively, for male technicians, female technicians, male nurses and female nurses. Corresponding annual effective doses were 1.6 µSv for technicians and 1 µSv for nurses. The highest equivalent dose values were determined for extrathoracic (ET) airways: 5 µSv and 10 µSv for nurses and technicians, respectively. It is concluded that estimated annual absorbed doses are over three orders of magnitude lower than the dose limit established in the Polish Atomic Law Act and in recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protection for medical staff.