Nuclear Medicine Archives

‘Gadonanotubes’: A Nanotech Contrast for MRI

Scientists from Rice University, the Baylor College of Medicine, the University of Houston and Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland have created a gadolinium-based nanotech MRI contrast agent that is quite effective, as confirmed by the latest study:

The new agents — dubbed gadonanotubes — use the same highly toxic metal, gadolinium, that is given to more than a quarter of MRI patients today, but the metal atoms are encased inside a hollow tube of pure carbon called a nanotube. Shrouding the toxic metals inside the benign carbon is expected to significantly reduce or eliminate the metal’s toxicity.
The research was published this month in the journal Chemical Communications.
“In prior work, we have boosted the effectiveness of gadolinium MRI contrast agents by encasing them in spheres of carbon called buckyballs,” said lead author Lon Wilson, professor of chemistry at Rice. “Each nanotube will hold more gadolinium atoms than a buckyball, so we expected them to be more effective agents. But they are actually much, much better than we anticipated, so much so that no existing theory can explain how they work.”
Wilson and colleagues use short segments of nanotubes, tiny cylinders of pure carbon about one billionth of a meter, or one nanometer, in diameter. That’s about as wide as a strand of DNA. The ultrashort segments are only about 20-100 times longer than they are wide, and once inside the nanotubes, the gadolinium atoms naturally aggregate into tiny clusters of about 10 atoms each. Wilson and colleagues suspect the clustering is causing the unexplained increases in magnetic and MRI effects that they observed in tests at Rice, at the University of Houston’s Texas Center for Superconductivity, and in the Swiss laboratories.

The press release from Rice U…

Sensation Cardiac 64

Sensation Cardiac 64

Mike Elgan of The Raw Feed, brings to our attention the Somatom Sensation Cardiac 64 system by Siemens. According to the company, its cardiac diagnostic system is the world’s fastest computer tomograph. (We have covered a closely related SOMATOM Sensation 64 CT scanner earlier.)
Company’s pitch:

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The Mobetron

The Mobetron

Intraop Medical Corporation, the maker of the Mobetron–the world’s first mobile, self-shielded, intraoperative electron linear accelerator–has announced the first installation of the device in Germany.
Company’s description of its technology:

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Xsight™ Spine Tracking System by Accuray™

Xsight™ Spine Tracking System by Accuray™

Accuray, Inc., the maker of the CyberKnife Stereotactic Radiosurgery System, has announced the introduction of Xsight™ Spine Tracking System:

Marking a major advance in non-invasive surgery, Accuray™ has introduced the Xsight™ Spine Tracking System, which integrates with the CyberKnife® Stereotactic Radiosurgery System to eliminate the need for surgical implantation of radiographic markers, or fiducials, in the delivery of radiosurgery treatments for spinal tumors.

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High-resolution Ultrasonic Transmission Tomography

High-resolution Ultrasonic Transmission Tomography

High-resolution Ultrasonic Transmission Tomography (HUTT) is a novel 3D imaging technology being developed at the University of Southern California’s Viterbi School of Engineering. The HUTT system employs extremely short ultrasonic wave pulses (about 250 nanosecond) of 4-12 megahertz frequency. Unlike regular ultrasound, the transmitted pulses come from a group of small ultrasonic transducers. Also unlike regular ultrasound, these pulses are picked up by a parallel array of receivers that is located on the opposite side of the tissue that is being visualised. People familiar with HUTT believe that this modality can produce “3D images of soft tissue that are superior to those produced by existing commercial X-ray, ultrasound or MRI units.”
Some promising features of this technology:

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Symbia TruePoint SPECT-CT

Symbia TruePoint SPECT-CT

The press release informs about the latest powerful nuclear medical tool that has been developed by Siemens:

The Nuclear Medicine Clinic and the Radiological Institute at Erlangen University Hospital have begun using Europe’s first combined system for SPECT (Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography) and diagnostic Computed Tomography from Siemens Medical Solutions, the Symbia TruePoint SPECT-CT. Erlangen University Hospital is one of only two institutes worldwide to clinically implement this new SPECT-CT procedure. This opens new opportunities for physicians in detecting tumors and cardiac diseases: diagnosis with the new system is earlier, more precise, and more reliable. This in turn significantly improves the patient’s chance of being cured.

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Trilogy™ Technology for Image-Guided Radiosurgery

Trilogy™ Technology for Image-Guided Radiosurgery

Varian Medical Systems reports that “Providence Medical Center in Kansas City has become the first cancer treatment center in the Central U.S. to use the new Trilogy™ system … for image-guided radiosurgery (IGRS), an ultra-precise treatment that uses new, real-time X-ray imaging capabilities to target cancer and neurological lesions.”
Company describes its system:

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BSD-2000 Hyperthermia System

BSD-2000 Hyperthermia System

BSD 2000/3D/MR
BSD Medical Corporation of Salt Lake City, Utah has received the Frost & Sullivan 2005 Technology Innovation of the Year Award in the field of cancer therapy devices. The system receiving the award is the BSD-2000, “used to selectively destroy cancer through focused RF energy, and to boost the effectiveness of radiation and chemotherapy in combined treatments.”

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TomoTherapy Hi.Art System

TomoTherapy Hi.Art System

News 14 TV from Raleigh, North Carolina reports that M. D. Anderson Cancer Center Orlando is the only center in the US that uses a new radiation therapy designed to treat cancer. The treatment in question is helical tomotherapy by TomoTherapy, Inc., as reported in M.D. Anderson’s press release.
The company explains the tomotherapy concept:

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