Home Community MRI New MRI Techniques could Mean Faster Scans: study

New MRI Techniques could Mean Faster Scans: study

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Both MRI techniques using different approaches to see molecular changes inside people's bodies could lead to faster, more detailed imaging scans that better detect health problems. Both magnetic resonance imaging technologies rely on manipulating the spin of molecules to provide more detailed scans that one day could rapidly do things like analyze how well a drug is working or tell how fast tumors are growing at the molecular level, researchers said.

"Our method has the potential to help doctors make faster and more accurate diagnoses in a wide range of medical conditions," Gary Green of the University of York, who led one of the studies, said.

"The technique could ultimately replace current clinical imaging technologies that depend on the use of radioactive substances or heavy metals, which themselves can create health concerns."

Green and colleagues based their technique on manipulating parahydrogen -- the fuel used in space shuttles -- by transferring its magnetism to a rage of molecules that are much more easily detected.

This means researchers, who are now testing their technique in animals, could potentially increase sensitivity in some scans by more than 1,000 times so data on biological systems that once took 90 days to record could be obtained in seconds, Green said.

A U.S. research team was able to see these molecules by "hyperpolarizing" some atoms in a sample, adjusting the spins of their nuclei to drastically increase their signal.

This technique creates large imbalances among the populations of those spin states and makes the molecules into more powerful magnets, which produce more detailed images.

"You thus have a signal that, at least transiently, can be thousands or tens of thousands times stronger than regular hydrogen in an MRI," Warren Warren of Duke University, who led the U.S. team, said.

Both sets of researchers published their findings in the journal Science.

Source: Reuters
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