Contact for Journalists/Media Only:
Jennifer Berman
Assistant Director, Media Relations
NYU Medical Center Public Affairs
212-404-3555
Email: Jennifer.Berman@nyumc.org
Contact for appointments and consultations:
NYU Radiology CT
212-263-8868
NYU Medical Center Installs 64-Slice CT Scanner
SOMATOM Sensation 64 Delivers Sharp Images in Less Than Ten Seconds
New York, September 19, 2005 – NYU Medical Center is one of
the first medical centers in the city to install a 64-Slice computed
tomography (CT) scanner at NYU‘s Biomedical Imaging Center,
and is presently using it to scan cardiac patients.
Today’s multislice CT scanners contain a host of technical
improvements, including the ability to capture 64 slices, in a single
scan, yielding images of arteries down to 1.5 mm in diameter. This
is proving to be sufficient for detecting and characterizing blockages
in heart vessels and determining who is in need for further testing
or treatment. The higher resolution and the speed of the imaging
allow radiologists to see details of the anatomy never before possible.
In addition, the test is much shorter and less invasive than a traditional
coronary angiogram and can give additional information on the heart
structures not offered by conventional coronary angiograms. The
entire process takes about 30 minutes, mostly for preparing the
patient; the scan itself takes a mere 10 to 12 seconds.
NYU patients now have a non-invasive alternative-cardiac CT angiography,
which generates images by passing a series of x-rays through the
body, creating image “slices” that are reconstructed
by computer to create three-dimensional pictures. A contrast solution
is injected to increase the visual detail, although in this case
the material is administered intravenously into an arm vein, eliminating
the potential complications associated with direct arterial catheterization.
Radiologists at NYU have performed about three hundred scans using
the 64-slice unit over the past year. They expect the volume of
tests to increase significantly as patients and referring physicians
learn about the benefits of the new technology.
“Multislice CT scanning is revolutionizing cardiac imaging,
“ says Jill Jacobs, M.D., Chief of Cardiac Imaging and Associate
Professor of Radiology. “In the past, if a patient had an
abnormal stress test, atypical chest pain, or certain other risk
factors, there was no other place to go diagnostically than an invasive
study. Many patients are fearful of having a catheterization; they
don’t want to have it unless it is absolutely necessary. “
The scanner is largely being used to evaluate patients who have
atypical signs and symptoms or significant risk factors for heart
disease, such as high cholesterol levels or a family history of
cardiac problems. It is also being used to follow patients who have
undergone bypass surgery or who have been treated with cardiac stents.
The CT scanner will also be used for research including the evaluation
of virtual CT colonoscopy, CT dose reduction strategies, pulmonary
nodule detection and classification, detection of irregularities
in articular cartilage, computer aided detection of lung and colon
cancer, and evaluation of the coronary arteries for atherosclerotic
disease.
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