Archives: 4/2010

43253gtb Varian Unveils TrueBeam Radiotherapy Accelerator
Varian Medical Systems out of Palo Alto, California has released its TrueBeam image guided radiotherapy and radiosurgery system. With its new product, the firm promises faster treatments and high precision in targeting tumors, as well as continuous monitoring and adjustment of the accelerator’s beam in line with the patient’s natural organ movements. University Hospital of Zürich has received one of two pre-release models of the TrueBeam and has already successfully treated patients with a variety of different cancers.
y2y34bb Varian Unveils TrueBeam Radiotherapy Accelerator

Designed to be a versatile platform, a TrueBeam system can be used for all forms of advanced external-beam radiotherapy including image-guided radiotherapy and radiosurgery (IGRT and IGRS), intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT), stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) and RapidArc® radiotherapy. The product line includes TrueBeam STx, specially configured for advanced radiosurgery.
A TrueBeam system can deliver treatments up to 50 percent faster with a dose delivery rate of up to 2400 monitor units per minute, double the maximum output of earlier, industry-leading Varian systems.
"Intelligent" automation further speeds treatments with an up to five-fold reduction in the number of steps needed for imaging, positioning and treating patients. A standard intensity-modulated treatment that would typically take ten minutes can be completed in less than two minutes. Complex radiosurgery that typically takes 40 minutes to an hour, can be completed in just 5 to 20 minutes.
The precision of a TrueBeam system is measured in increments of less than a millimeter. This accuracy is made possible by the system’s sophisticated architecture, which establishes a new level of synchronization between imaging, patient positioning, motion management, beam shaping, and dose delivery technologies, performing accuracy checks every ten milliseconds throughout an entire treatment. Over 100,000 data points are monitored continually as a treatment progresses, ensuring that the system maintains a "true isocenter," or focal point of treatment.

43253gta Varian Unveils TrueBeam Radiotherapy Accelerator

The TrueBeam system also delivers Varian’s new ‘gated’ RapidArc radiotherapy, which compensates for tumor motion by synchronizing imaging with dose delivery during a continuous rotation around the patient.
Other innovations built in to the TrueBeam system include:

  • A streamlined treatment console with a modern, graphical, easy-to-use interface that consolidates all controls for imaging, treatment, and motion management. Treatment processes and workflows are simplified and easy to learn, with prompts, messages, and a “follow the light” guidance system that enhances safety by guiding therapists through the steps of even the most complex treatments. “One button” IGRT enables the therapist to spend more time attending to the patient, and less time managing the technology.
  • A newly-designed X-ray tube is optimized for generating high volumes of quality 3-D (cone-beam CT) images.
  • These 3-D images can be generated in 60% less time, with a 25% reduction in X-ray dose to the patient.
  • A treatment couch that can be positioned with sub-millimeter accuracy in relation to imaging and beam delivery processes.
  • A unique new non-clinical Developer Mode designed to facilitate collaboration with Oncology thought leaders interested in pioneering new treatment and imaging techniques.

  • Product page: Varian TrueBeam…
    Press releases: Varian Medical Systems Introduces Revolutionary New TrueBeam™ System for High-Precision Image-Guided Radiotherapy and Radiosurgery…; University Hospital Zürich First in the World to Treat Cancer Patients with New TrueBeam™ System from Varian Medical Systems…

    Artis zee cockpit ca6 Siemens Artis zee Cockpit for Radiology Control Rooms
    Siemens has released the Artis zee Cockpit aimed at interventional radiology suites that typically employ a number of computer monitors. The new system aims to replace multiple screens with one 30 inch medical grade monitor that can interface with different imaging systems.

  • 30′ Dual HD medical-grade monitor (4 megapixel)
  • Image drag & drop
  • Choose from 4 different screen layouts
  • Consolidate up to 6 video sources in one screen (Artis zee, AXIOM Sensis, syngo X Workplace, syngo Imaging, syngo Workflow, syngo Dynamics)
  • Full control by a double-click in the image
  • Work more comfortable with only one workplace
  • Save space in the control room
  • Product page: Artis zee Cockpit…
    Press release: Clearing up the control room: Siemens introduces a cockpit for intervention rooms…
    Flashbacks: Artis zee from Siemens ; iGuide CAPPA Knows Where the Tip of the Needle Is; TRUMF’s OR Table Integrated With Siemens Multi-axis Fluoroscopy Systems

    carbon nanotubes 300 Carbon Nanotube Assemblies May Serve as Artificial Nerve BundlesResearchers from Oak Ridge National Laboratory have developed a method of bundling thousands of nano-sized glass tubes, each having a conducting carbon core. Among other things, the technology may make possible artificial neural bundles to interface with prostheses and for future surgeries of the nervous system.

    Ultimately, the goal is to duplicate the function of a living system by combining the existing technology of glass fiber drawing with the multi-functionality of sub-micron (0.4 micron) scale carbon nanotubes, according to Ivanov ]Ilia Ivanov, researcher at the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences Division, ORNL–ed.], who described the process.
    “We make this material in a way similar to what you may have done in high school when making a glass capillary over a Bunsen burner,” Ivanov said. “There, you would take the glass tube, heat it up and pull, or draw, as soon as the glass became soft.”
    Ivanov and John Simpson of the Measurement Science and Systems Engineering Division are doing something similar except they use thousands of glass tubes filled with carbon nanotube powder. After several draw cycles, they demonstrated that they could make fibers just four times thicker than a human hair containing 19,600 sub-micron channels with each channel filled with conducting carbon. Each carbon nanotube-containing channel is electrically insulated from its neighbors by glass so it can be used as an individual communication channel.
    “The human hand has a density of receptors at the fingertips of about 2,500 per square centimeter and about 17,000 tactile receptors in the hand,” Ivanov said. “So in terms of density of channels, we are already in the range needed for 17,000 receptors in the hand.”
    The next steps are to make these channels highly conductive and then show sensor communication through individual channels.

    Image caption: An artificially colored scanning electron microscope photograph of one of the channels with the carbon nanotube bundle (yellow-green) protruding from it, above the surface of the glass (blue).
    Press release: New ORNL carbon composite holds promise for bionics…
    Abstract in Nanotechnology: Processing of loose carbon nanotubes into isolated, high density submicron channels

    ENT

    12341234dd XprESS Balloon Catheter System for Chronic Sinusitis
    At the ongoing Combined Otolaryngology Spring Meeting in Las Vegas, Entellus Medical out of Minneapolis, Minnesota has unveiled a new multi-sinus dilation tool for access and treatment of frontal recesses and sphenoid sinus ostia. The XprESS device received FDA clearance in February and the firm will be making available the new balloon catheter to ENT surgeons.

  • The tip of the XprESS device is shapeable to adapt to the patient’s unique anatomy for fast, efficient access to the frontal and sphenoid sinuses.
  • As Easy to Use as a Sinus Seeker
  • The XprESS™ Multi-Sinus Dilation Tool consists of a curved sinus seeker outfitted with a slideable dilation balloon.
  • Designed to look and feel like the sinus seeker ENTs use every day – XprESS is both intuitive and easy to use.
  • The integrated suction feature enhances visibility and improves efficiency during FESS procedures.
  • 6161614434 XprESS Balloon Catheter System for Chronic Sinusitis
    Product page: XprESS Tool…
    Press release: Entellus Medical® Launches the XprESS™ Multi-Sinus Dilation Tool at COSM 2010 Annual Meeting…

    7234nnnaa Ergo Portable Nuclear Imaging System Receives 510(k) Clearance
    Digirad Corp. of Poway, CA has received 510(k) clearance from the FDA to begin marketing its Ergo mobile nuclear imaging system. Thanks to its solid-state gamma camera, the Ergo provides a degree of portability and flexibility not previously seen in the field. Imaging studies can be conducted in the nuclear medicine department or brought to the patient, saving time and improving patient satisfaction while delivering high quality results. The large field, solid-state gamma camera also expands the reach of portable nuclear imaging to areas outside cardiology and oncology, offering a 12.25 x 15.5 inch field of view, an intrinsic spatial resolution of 3.25 mm, an energy resolution of 7.9%, and 5 Mcps.
    Digirad plans to begin shipping production units in June to hospitals in the US and abroad.
    Press release: Digirad Receives FDA Clearance for Ergo Large Field-of-View, Solid-State, General Imaging Nuclear Medicine Camera…
    Link: Digirad…

    subscribe pic1 FineThanx Watches Over Your Grannies While You Are BusyFineThanx is a new automated phone system that automatically calls your elderly family members to check how they are doing. It checks in on clients once or twice daily and if no one answers or the person is unwell, the system calls a member of the “care circle”. If everything is fine, the system will send a report by email, so you can continue working or finishing that golf course unbothered and check in for reassurance on your iPhone or PC afterward.
    Here’s a sample FineThanx call:


    Product page: FineThanx

    89234nnsdf Worlds First Remote Heart Rhythm Treatment Procedure Using a Robotic Arm
    The world’s first remote robotic heart rhythm treatment procedure was conducted at the University Hospitals of Leicester. It was performed using the Catheter Robotics Remote Catheter Manipulation System. A 70 year old man with atrial fibrillation had a catheter ablation controlled by a robotic arm, while the cardiologist – sitting in a separate room – used remote control to steer the catheter endovascularly into the heart to correct faulty tissue fibers. Although it was controlled from an adjacent room in this case, the fully remote-controlled robot could be controlled from anywhere in the world. The procedure was successfully completed in one hour and the patient is supposedly doing well.
    Technology demo video and links below the fold:

    (more…)

    4353s1 Lensless Imaging of Whole Biological Cells with Soft X RaysA team of scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has used X-ray diffraction microscopy to make images of whole yeast cells, achieving the highest resolution–11 to 13 nanometers (billionths of a meter)–ever obtained with this method for biological specimens. Resolutions like this were previously only possible to achieve with an electron microscope, but electron microscopy is limited to very thin samples, a few hundred nanometers or less. Lensless X-ray diffraction microscopy produces a high-resolution diffraction pattern from noncrystalline structures like the membranes and organelles of a cell, by using laser-like, coherent light having all the same frequency and phase. The computer converts these patterns into an image of the cell. The researchers expect that full 3-D tomography of whole cells at equivalent resolution should soon be possible.
    Press statement: Lensless Imaging of Whole Biological Cells with Soft X-Rays…

    g3n434d Genome Sequencing Continues Move to MainstreamOn Tuesday John Halamka, the patron saint of geek doctors in this editor’s opinion, claimed that he shared the stage at a conference with most of the humans who have had their entire genome sequenced for the last time in history.

    This morning, I’ll be on stage with all the humans who have had their genomes sequenced – James Watson (pictured above), Henry Louis Gates, Misha Angrist, John West, Jay Flatley, Greg Lucier, Seong-Jim Kim, Rosalynn Gill, George Church, and James Lupski.
    The GET Conference 2010 marks the last chance in history to collect everyone with a personal genome sequence on the same stage to share their experiences and discuss the important ways in which personal genomes will affect all of our lives in the coming years.

    Dr. Halmaka makes this claim based on his prediction of an upcoming geometric growth in the number of people getting their entire genome sequenced due to technology improvements driving down costs, making future gatherings of this sort very unlikely. Even this gathering was difficult, telling us via email that J. Craig Venter was unable to attend.
    The outcome of this growth will be more articles like the one just published at Gizmodo by an anonymous author detailing his experiences comparing his results from 23andMe and Navigenics. We have covered both companies before, so we won’t go into the details, but the fact that the author of the Gizmodo piece chose to remain anonymous hints at the distrust some people still have in the face of Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA) of 2008.
    Geek Doctor: The Genomes, Environments and Traits Conference
    Gizmodo: Looking Into My Genome Reveals Risks I’ll Never Unsee