Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - (Page 17) [A clinical image of a breast MRI, with DCIS and essentially occult by mammogram, taken using Aurora Imaging Technology’s 1.5T dedicated bilateral breast MRI system. Image courtesy of Toledo Hospital. ] clips and even prosthetic devices. With 1.5T, patients who have these safety concerns are not an issue and can be imaged without an increase in metal artifact. Moody and researchers have used 3D MRI (1.5T TwinSpeed MR system from GE Healthcare) to accurately detect bleeding within the walls of diseased carotid arteries. Their study results suggest that the technique may prove to be a useful screening tool for patients at high risk for stroke, according to a study published in the October issue of Radiology. “1.5T just works,” he says. The evolution from lower field to 1.5T over time has been a relatively linear and natural progression until the emergence of 3T, when the industry thought 3T images would be better, but 1.5T held fast. “1.5T has now struck upon the highest level upon which you can achieve good imaging for the array of imaging applications, such as abdominal, neuro, cardiac, chest, spine, peripheral, joint imaging—without one of those groups falling off the map,” Moody comments. “The reason 1.5T is so successful is that it works for all of those applications.” “As you go to the higher field strengths, because of the physics, some of the artifacts that you get start to impact on the image quality that you don’t get at 1.5T and you have to work harder to get your images out at 3T,” he says. Another limitation of 3T, and thus a benefit of 1.5T, is related to its energy deposition. 3T might enable faster and higher resolution imaging, however, the restriction is in how much energy can be put back into the patient. “With 3T you have to ease back HealthImaging.com on the throttle, and you potentially lose some of the advantages you had of ramping up to that field strength in the first place,” Moody says, who adds that there seems to be a slight plateauing of that linear progression of the low field strength. Instead of racing to the next level in magnet strength, the imaging community has hit a plateau, staying strong with 1.5T MRI for its applicability across imaging applications. “If you need high resolution and you can keep things still for long enough, then you will get the benefits of 3T,” he concludes. “If you are dealing with areas where you need less resolution and you have potential movements, like in the abdomen, then you are probably well-off with 1.5T.” A dedicated 1.5T MR MR-based breast imaging also is gaining steam, topping the charts as the No. 1 clinical area that facilities are focusing on with MRI in 2008 (at 33 percent of Health Imaging & IT Top Trends Survey respondents). Clinical studies consistently show that breast MRI finds previously undetected lesions and the speed and comfort of the scanners makes the 1.5T imaging workhorse an ideal modality for dedicated breast imaging. Installs are soaring, as are the number of system offerings. With breast imaging at 1.5T, it isn’t necessary to have a dedicated scanner to understand the clinical value that 1.5T brings, but it does “have its advantages,” says Robin Shermis, MD, medical director of breast imaging at Toledo Hospital Breast Care Center. The hospital utilizes the 1.5T MR for breast cancer screening of high-risk patients, pre-operative staging in patient diagnosed with breast cancer, to establish recurrent cancer or residuals and as a problem-solving tool to go beyond what conventional imaging provides for breast imaging, Shermis says. The benefit of using the dedicated 1.5T unit, from Aurora Imaging Technology, is that from the ground up, both the software and hardware are designed around the breast. Using SpiralRodeo software for diagnosing ductal carcinoma in situ allows for better resolution and faster imaging. “While some machines take 45 minutes, we are done in 20 with better resolution to see lesions that other machines can’t,” he adds. “We get about 160 slices per breast while most machines get about 64 slices,” Shermis says. “The signal-to-noise ratio is basically equivalent to a 4T magnet because SpiralRodeo gets much better fat suppression, enabling us to see lesions much more clearly.” Regardless of the reasons behind choosing 1.5T MRI, it is evident that the scanners are continuing to meet a pressing need across the spectrum of imaging specialties, in the face of 3T’s gaining popularity— clearly proving that the modality has a secure foothold in the industry and is here to stay. December 2008 | Health Imaging & IT 17 http://www.biomorph.com http://www.biomorph.com http://www.HealthImaging.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 Table of Contents The Enterprise News Update Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete Why 1.5T MRI is Leading the Pack Workflow Strategies Aid Advanced Visualization Deployment Illuminating Reading Room Design for Better Reading Strategies Cardiac SPECT Sharpens its Focus OrthoPACS: The Information Backbone of the Orthopedic Clinic Imaging Tools Reader's Resource Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 (Page Cover1) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 (Page Cover2) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 (Page 1) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 (Page 2) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 3) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 4) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - The Enterprise (Page 5) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - News Update (Page 6) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - News Update (Page 7) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 8) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 9) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 10) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 11) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 12) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 13) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 14) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Technology at Work: What You Need to Compete (Page 15) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Why 1.5T MRI is Leading the Pack (Page 16) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Why 1.5T MRI is Leading the Pack (Page 17) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Workflow Strategies Aid Advanced Visualization Deployment (Page 18) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Workflow Strategies Aid Advanced Visualization Deployment (Page 19) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Workflow Strategies Aid Advanced Visualization Deployment (Page 20) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Workflow Strategies Aid Advanced Visualization Deployment (Page 21) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Illuminating Reading Room Design for Better Reading Strategies (Page 22) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Illuminating Reading Room Design for Better Reading Strategies (Page 23) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Cardiac SPECT Sharpens its Focus (Page 24) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Cardiac SPECT Sharpens its Focus (Page 25) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - OrthoPACS: The Information Backbone of the Orthopedic Clinic (Page 26) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - OrthoPACS: The Information Backbone of the Orthopedic Clinic (Page 27) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - OrthoPACS: The Information Backbone of the Orthopedic Clinic (Page 28) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Imaging Tools (Page 29) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Imaging Tools (Page 30) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Imaging Tools (Page 31) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Reader's Resource (Page 32) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Reader's Resource (Page Cover3) Health Imaging & IT - December 2008 - Reader's Resource (Page Cover4)
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