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Ed. Note: The following is a press
release from Barrow Neurological Institute.
January 4, 2006
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Researchers at
Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix have developed a new method that
allows technicians to obtain clearer Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans
with less sensitivity to patient motion.
PROPELLER is an
acronym for "Periodically Rotated Overlapping ParallEL Lines with Enhanced
Reconstruction." This method acquires data in a unique way that allows one
to track the motion of the patient during the MRI scan. The motion can then
be removed.
"While PROPELLER technology continues to be refined, GE has already
incorporated the novel method into new medical equipment," said Jim Pipe,
senior staff scientist in the MRI Department at Barrow. "We believe that
PROPELLER technology will help drive the future of MRI."
There are two major applications for this method. The first is
motion-insensitive imaging. For the first time, high-quality MRI scans can
be collected on many segments of the population who cannot hold still
(children, Parkinson's patients, etc.). This is leading the technology to a
point where patient motion, which may be the biggest obstacle to good
images, is no longer a factor.
The second application for PROPELLER is stroke imaging. The technology used
to detect and characterize strokes, called "Diffusion Weighted Imaging (DWI),"
is extremely sensitive to even minute motion in a patient. Prior to
PROPELLER, DWI images suffered in quality because the methods used to reduce
this motion sensitivity also reduced image quality. With PROPELLER DWI,
small strokes are much easier to detect, grade and follow during treatment.
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