2012 Confirmation by South Korean Keimyung University Medical School showing that FMTVDM proves Technetium-99m Isotope Redistribution begins 5-minutes after injection.
Following a decade of additional research, and accusations [https://www.flemingmethod.com/about] that Sestamibi could not and did not redistribute (move around after initial uptake by the heart), evidence of Sestamibi redistribution and FMTVDM was presented at the 2011 Annual Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) Conference.
FMTVDM proved that isotopes like Sestamibi do in fact redistribute beginning at 5-minutes following injection and that this redistribution makes it possible to find critical heart disease that otherwise would be missed.

This research was considered important enough, that I was asked to return the following year for the 2012 Annual Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) Conference, where I showed that use of FMTVDM not only proved Sestamibi redistribution but also showed that because of this redistribution, only one dose of Sestamibi was required thereby reducing the amount of radiation people received for this diagnostic imaging.
FMTVDM measurements of the isotope made it possible to find severe-critical heart disease missed by the late imaging of the heart (beginning at 60-minutes instead of the critical 5-minute mark) using the two injection (higher radiation) delayed imaging approach promoted by the pharmaceutical company.


While I knew what research I would be presenting, what I was unaware of was that research scientists and physicians from South Korea had heard my 2011 presentation. While they did not have FMTVDM, or the proprietary equation required for the more sophisticated information that can be obtained using FMTVDM, they did use the 5-minute and 60-minute post-injection times for their imaging.
As a result, at this same 2012 Annual Society of Nuclear Medicine (SNM) Conference, South Korean physicians from Keimyung University showed their research, revealing that 40% of people with heart disease are missed using the conventional two injected doses of isotopes and waiting too long (60-minutes) before imaging patients.
