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Home » Conference Reports » RSNA 2008 » Ultrasound

Diagnostic Imaging. Vol. 31 No. 11
 

Siemens taps technology to boost performance

Workflow, patient comfort, image quality rise with innovative devices and applications

By Boris Tolkien | November 1, 2009
Mr. Tolkien is vice president of marketing, magnetic resonance, for Siemens Healthcare.

Siemens Healthcare is building on a tradition of innovation. From 0.35T to 3T and in head-to-toe clinical applications, Siemens' systems and technology have made fast, flexible, and accurate scans the rule.

This commitment to innovation is exemplified by the company's commercial release in 2003 of the Total imaging matrix. With more than 4000 systems sold, Tim has changed how MRI is performed. The accuracy, flexibility, and speed provided by Tim make patient and coil repositioning virtually unnecessary and enable reduced acquisition times. These benefits translate into workflow improvements and increased patient throughput. These, in turn, improve the bottom lines of our customers by, for example, allowing a complete examination of the central nervous system to be performed in less than 10 minutes.

In 2004, Siemens launched the Magnetom Espree, the world's first 1.5T openbore MR scanner. At a time when a 60-cm-diameter magnet bore was the standard, Espree changed the game with an expanded 70-cm bore and the shortest system length in the industry (125 cm).

Siemens' goal in combining a high-field 1.5T magnet with an open MRI was to provide advanced imaging, regardless of patient size (up to 550 pounds), without forfeiting accuracy and speed. This combination helps to better address the patient's disease states with appropriate imaging techniques, such as cardiac breath-hold studies and peripheral run-off exams.

The addition of Tim technology to these systems, then, provides more flexible access to large fields-of-view (FOV). Where traditional vertical-field open MRIs are restricted by the FOV of each individual coil, Tim allows you to combine elements from physically separate coils without patient repositioning or coil changes. This results in a much faster clinical routine that enables shorter exam times.

Just three years later, in 2007, Siemens reached a new milestone with the introduction of Magnetom Verio, the first system to combine 3T field strength, a 70-cm bore, and Tim technology. The shortest 3T system on the market today, Verio also boasts an ultralight magnet with zero helium boil-off. It provides a large FOV and supports a full range of clinical applications that can be performed at high speed and deliver high-quality images.

In addition to traditional syngo applications, Tim technology on the Magnetom Verio also allows for advanced applications, such as diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), functional MRI, non–contrast-enhanced perfusion imaging (ASL), and single- and multivoxel spectroscopy, to be performed.

The design of Siemens' 70-cm-bore systems facilitates the imaging of bariatric and claustrophobic patients and, in some cases, makes the examination even possible. The wide bore allows for fewer patient sedations, accommodates a wider range of patients, and provides easy access for interventional MR.

At last year's RSNA meeting, Siemens complemented its MR portfolio with the Magnetom Espree – Pink, a dedicated MR breast scanner that combines the wide-bore design of the Espree with the Sentinelle Vanguard, a breast coil solution that allows breast imaging and biopsy access. Magnetom Espree – Pink is upgradable to a Magnetom Espree whole-body scanner.

And now, at RSNA 2009, Siemens will innovate again with a partnership that will redefine productivity. This new introduction will allow anyone, regardless of experience level or complexity of patient need, to realize the total power of MRI, with throughput taken to the next level.

 

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RSNA 2008 Ultrasound

Siemens taps technology to boost performance
November 1, 2009

Workflow, patient comfort, image quality rise with innovative devices and applications.

Breast ultrasound scanner debuts in Siemens RSNA booth
December 5, 2008

Siemens Healthcare unveiled a breast ultrasound system at RSNA 2008 whose automated exams could help women’s health practitioners achieve the potential of ultrasound as a complement to mammography.

Touchscreen enhances GE compact ultrasound
December 4, 2008

GE Healthcare combined ultrasound scanner controls and real-time imaging on a single display with the integration of a touchscreen monitor into its compact Logiq e product.

Radiologists identify new self-embedding disorder plaguing teens
December 3, 2008

A new kind of self-mutilation is creeping into the teenage population, one that involves inserting objects into the body, according to radiologist Dr. William E. Shiels, II, who presented the first study of the adolescent phenomenon at the RSNA conference Wednesday.

CT bests ultrasound for diagnosing ER patients with abdominal pain
December 3, 2008

The news was mixed for CT in the emergency department in research presented Wednesday at the RSNA meeting. CT was found to be better than ultrasound for diagnosing ER patients with abdominal pain, but radiation dose can be drastically reduced for patients suspected of appendicitis, according to authors of several studies.

Automated breast ultrasound identifies nonexistent breast cancer lesions
December 3, 2008

Automated breast ultrasound should not replace handheld ultrasound in a diagnostic breast center but rather should be used in conjunction with it or play a role in screening breast ultrasound, according to a study presented at the 2008 RSNA meeting.

Moola gets reports flying out the door
December 2, 2008

When offered $5000 bonuses, motivated residents at Massachusetts General Hospital completed scan signoffs in a fraction of the usual time.






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