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Searchterm 'Magnetic Resonance' was also found in the following services: 
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FONAR CorporationMRI Resource Directory:
 - Manufacturers -
 
www.fonar.com The company is a leading manufacturer and developer of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners. The Patient Friendly MRI Company, formed in 1978, is engaged in the business of inventing, manufacturing, selling and servicing magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners. FONAR is the oldest MRI company in the world. After receiving hundreds of millions in a windfall from protecting their MRI patents, they made a MRI scanner that no other MRI manufacturer has. One that the patient stands in and they call Indomitable, the Stand-Up MRI. Patients like it because it is the least claustrophobic, most comfortable MRI on the market. Doctors like it because of its superior image quality and for the first time, the patient can be scanned in the weight-bearing position, or the position of pain or symptom. In October of 2004, the company changed the product name of the Stand-Up MRI to the Upright MRI. Fonar introduced the first "open" MRI scanner in 1980 and is the originator of the iron-core nonsuperconductive and permanent magnet technology.

MRI Scanners:

- 0.6T:
•
QUAD™ 12000 - Its 19-inch gap and Whisper Gradients™ make it extraordinarily spacious, quiet and comfortable. With its signal to noise advantage of 0.6 T and its comprehensive array of Organ-Specific™ receiver coils, the QUAD™ 12000 provides high-speed, high resolution and high contrast scanning. Product Specification
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OR 360°™ - cleared for marketing by the FDA in March 2000, 360° access to the patient. A dual-purpose scanner, it can be used for conventional diagnostic scanning when not in surgical mode. Product Specification
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Open Sky MRI™ - A dual purpose scanner for high-throughput scanning. Product Specification
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Echo™ - open, comfortable, compact, reliable, easily sited and economical. Product Specification
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Scanners in progress - Pinnacle™, a high-field superconducting Open MRI - mpExtremity MRI™, a small, in-office, weight-bearing MRI for extremities.


Contact Information
MAIL
FONAR Corporation
110 Marcus Drive
Melville, N.Y. 11747
USA
PHONE
+1-631-694-2929
FAX
+1-631-390-7766
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• View the NEWS results for 'FONAR Corporation' (87).Open this link in a new window.
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
FONAR Announces Fiscal 2014 Second Quarter Earnings Results
Friday, 14 February 2014   by www.twst.com    
  News & More:
Fonar Is An Unusual And Undervalued Play On The Obesity Epidemic
Monday, 8 December 2014   by seekingalpha.com    
MRI's inside story
Thursday, 4 December 2003   by www.economist.com    
Searchterm 'Magnetic Resonance' was also found in the following services: 
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Radiology  (14) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (27) Open this link in a new window
MRI History
 
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Sir Joseph Larmor (1857-1942) developed the equation that the angular frequency of precession of the nuclear spins being proportional to the strength of the magnetic field. [Larmor relationship]
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In the 1930's, Isidor Isaac Rabi (Columbia University) succeeded in detecting and measuring single states of rotation of atoms and molecules, and in determining the mechanical and magnetic moments of the nuclei.
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Felix Bloch (Stanford University) and Edward Purcell (Harvard University) developed instruments, which could measure the magnetic resonance in bulk material such as liquids and solids. (Both honored with the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1952.) [The birth of the NMR spectroscopy]
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In the early 70's, Raymond Damadian (State University of New York) demonstrated with his NMR device, that there are different T1 relaxation times between normal and abnormal tissues of the same type, as well as between different types of normal tissues.
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In 1973, Paul Lauterbur (State University of New York) described a new imaging technique that he termed Zeugmatography. By utilizing gradients in the magnetic field, this technique was able to produce a two-dimensional image (back-projection). (Through analysis of the characteristics of the emitted radio waves, their origin could be determined.) Peter Mansfield further developed the utilization of gradients in the magnetic field and the mathematically analysis of these signals for a more useful imaging technique. (Paul C Lauterbur and Peter Mansfield were awarded with the 2003 Nobel Prize in Medicine.)
•
In 1975, Richard Ernst introduced 2D NMR using phase and frequency encoding, and the Fourier Transform. Instead of Paul Lauterbur's back-projection, he timely switched magnetic field gradients ('NMR Fourier Zeugmatography'). [This basic reconstruction method is the basis of current MRI techniques.]
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1977/78: First images could be presented. A cross section through a finger by Peter Mansfield and Andrew A. Maudsley. Peter Mansfield also could present the first image through the abdomen.
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In 1977, Raymond Damadian completed (after 7 years) the first MR scanner (Indomitable). In 1978, he founded the FONAR Corporation, which manufactured the first commercial MRI scanner in 1980. Fonar went public in 1981.
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1981: Schering submitted a patent application for Gd-DTPA dimeglumine.
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1982: The first 'magnetization-transfer' imaging by Robert N. Muller.
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In 1983, Toshiba obtained approval from the Ministry of Health and Welfare in Japan for the first commercial MRI system.
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In 1984, FONAR Corporation receives FDA approval for its first MRI scanner.
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1986: Jürgen Hennig, A. Nauerth, and Hartmut Friedburg (University of Freiburg) introduced RARE (rapid acquisition with relaxation enhancement) imaging. Axel Haase, Jens Frahm, Dieter Matthaei, Wolfgang Haenicke, and Dietmar K. Merboldt (Max-Planck-Institute, Göttingen) developed the FLASH (fast low angle shot) sequence.
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1988: Schering's MAGNEVIST gets its first approval by the FDA.
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In 1991, fMRI was developed independently by the University of Minnesota's Center for Magnetic Resonance Research (CMRR) and Massachusetts General Hospital's (MGH) MR Center.
•
From 1992 to 1997 Fonar was paid for the infringement of it's patents from 'nearly every one of its competitors in the MRI industry including giant multi-nationals as Toshiba, Siemens, Shimadzu, Philips and GE'.
•
 
Images, Movies, Sliders:
 Cardiac Infarct Short Axis Cine Overview  Open this link in a new window
    

Courtesy of  Robert R. Edelman
 
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• View the DATABASE results for 'MRI History' (6).Open this link in a new window


• View the NEWS results for 'MRI History' (1).Open this link in a new window.
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging, History & Introduction
2000   by www.cis.rit.edu    
A Short History of the Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
   by www.teslasociety.com    
Fonar Our History
   by www.fonar.com    
  News & More:
Scientists win Nobels for work on MRI
Tuesday, 10 June 2003   by usatoday30.usatoday.com    
2001 Lemelson-MIT Lifetime Achievement Award Winner
   by web.mit.edu    
MRI's inside story
Thursday, 4 December 2003   by www.economist.com    
MRI Resources 
Pregnancy - Education pool - Blood Flow Imaging - MRA - Veterinary MRI - Pacemaker
 
Medical Imaging
 
The definition of imaging is the visual representation of an object. Medical imaging began after the discovery of x-rays by Konrad Roentgen 1896. The first fifty years of radiological imaging, pictures have been created by focusing x-rays on the examined body part and direct depiction onto a single piece of film inside a special cassette. The next development involved the use of fluorescent screens and special glasses to see x-ray images in real time.
A major development was the application of contrast agents for a better image contrast and organ visualization. In the 1950s, first nuclear medicine studies showed the up-take of very low-level radioactive chemicals in organs, using special gamma cameras. This medical imaging technology allows information of biologic processes in vivo. Today, PET and SPECT play an important role in both clinical research and diagnosis of biochemical and physiologic processes. In 1955, the first x-ray image intensifier allowed the pick up and display of x-ray movies.
In the 1960s, the principals of sonar were applied to diagnostic imaging. Ultrasonic waves generated by a quartz crystal are reflected at the interfaces between different tissues, received by the ultrasound machine, and turned into pictures with the use of computers and reconstruction software. Ultrasound imaging is an important diagnostic tool, and there are great opportunities for its further development. Looking into the future, the grand challenges include targeted contrast agents, real-time 3D ultrasound imaging, and molecular imaging.
Digital imaging techniques were implemented in the 1970s into conventional fluoroscopic image intensifier and by Godfrey Hounsfield with the first computed tomography. Digital images are electronic snapshots sampled and mapped as a grid of dots or pixels. The introduction of x-ray CT revolutionised medical imaging with cross sectional images of the human body and high contrast between different types of soft tissue. These developments were made possible by analog to digital converters and computers. The multislice spiral CT technology has expands the clinical applications dramatically.
The first MRI devices were tested on clinical patients in 1980. The spread of CT machines is the spur to the rapid development of MRI imaging and the introduction of tomographic imaging techniques into diagnostic nuclear medicine. With technological improvements including higher field strength, more open MRI magnets, faster gradient systems, and novel data-acquisition techniques, MRI is a real-time interactive imaging modality that provides both detailed structural and functional information of the body.
Today, imaging in medicine has advanced to a stage that was inconceivable 100 years ago, with growing medical imaging modalities:
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)
Positron emission tomography (PET)

All this type of scans are an integral part of modern healthcare. Because of the rapid development of digital imaging modalities, the increasing need for an efficient management leads to the widening of radiology information systems (RIS) and archival of images in digital form in picture archiving and communication systems (PACS). In telemedicine, healthcare professionals are linked over a computer network. Using cutting-edge computing and communications technologies, in videoconferences, where audio and visual images are transmitted in real time, medical images of MRI scans, x-ray examinations, CT scans and other pictures are shareable.
See also Hybrid Imaging.

See also the related poll results: 'In 2010 your scanner will probably work with a field strength of', 'MRI will have replaced 50% of x-ray exams by'
Radiology-tip.comradDiagnostic Imaging
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Medical-Ultrasound-Imaging.comMedical Imaging
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• View the DATABASE results for 'Medical Imaging' (20).Open this link in a new window


• View the NEWS results for 'Medical Imaging' (81).Open this link in a new window.
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Image Characteristics and Quality
   by www.sprawls.org    
Multimodal Nanoparticles for Quantitative Imaging(.pdf)
Tuesday, 13 December 2011   by alexandria.tue.nl    
Medical imaging shows cost control problem
Tuesday, 6 November 2012   by www.mysanantonio.com    
  News & More:
iMPI: An Exploration of Post-Launch Advancements
Friday, 29 September 2023   by www.diagnosticimaging.com    
Advances in medical imaging enable visualization of white matter tracts in fetuses
Wednesday, 12 May 2021   by www.eurekalert.or    
Positron Emission Tomographic Imaging in Stroke
Monday, 28 December 2015   by www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov    
Multiparametric MRI for Detecting Prostate Cancer
Wednesday, 17 December 2014   by www.onclive.com    
Combination of MRI and PET imaging techniques can prevent second breast biopsy
Sunday, 29 June 2014   by www.news-medical.net    
3D-DOCTOR Tutorial
   by www.ablesw.com    
Searchterm 'Magnetic Resonance' was also found in the following services: 
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News  (787)  Resources  (181)  Forum  (1)  
 
Molecular Imaging
 
Molecular Imaging is a new diagnostic discipline to visualize biological processes.
Molecular magnetic resonance imaging (mMRI) offers the potential to image tissues at the cellular and subcellular level. Targeted MR contrast agents enhance the diagnostic specificity and range of molecular magnetic resonance imaging.
Other modalities that can be used for noninvasive molecular imaging:
•
Ultrasound;
•
optical imaging;
•
positron emission tomography (PET);
•
single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT).


See also Nanoparticle, Monocrystalline Iron Oxide Nanoparticle, Polycrystalline Iron Oxide Nanoparticles, Liposomes, Monoclonal Antibodies, Bimodal Imaging, Tumor Specific Agents, and Intracellular Contrast Agents.
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• View the DATABASE results for 'Molecular Imaging' (10).Open this link in a new window


• View the NEWS results for 'Molecular Imaging' (28).Open this link in a new window.
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Multimodal Nanoparticles for Quantitative Imaging(.pdf)
Tuesday, 13 December 2011   by alexandria.tue.nl    
Molecular Magnetic Resonance Imaging(.pdf)
2005   by www.medical.siemens.com    
  News & More:
Smarter MRI diagnosis with nano MRI lamp
Monday, 6 February 2017   by www.eurekalert.org    
Molecular MRI technique gives early indication of cancer treatment effectiveness
Monday, 11 April 2016   by www.healthimaging.com    
Molecular imaging and radiochemistry: the importance of instrumentation. An interview with Professor Bjorn Wangler
Thursday, 4 February 2016   by www.news-medical.net    
Positron Emission Tomographic Imaging in Stroke
Monday, 28 December 2015   by www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov    
Potential and Limitations of Oxygen-17 MR Perfusion Measurements
Monday, 1 March 2004   by www.case.edu    
Searchterm 'Magnetic Resonance' was also found in the following services: 
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Radiology  (14) Open this link in a new windowUltrasound  (27) Open this link in a new window
NMRForum -
related threadsMRI Resource Directory:
 - NMR -
 
Nuclear magnetic resonance is a diagnostic procedure, based on the principles of magnetic resonance.
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• View the DATABASE results for 'NMR' (41).Open this link in a new window


• View the NEWS results for 'NMR' (5).Open this link in a new window.
 
Further Reading:
  Basics:
Magnetic Resonance Imaging, History & Introduction
2000   by www.cis.rit.edu    
  News & More:
MRI's inside story
Thursday, 4 December 2003   by www.economist.com    
MRI Resources 
Contrast Agents - Diffusion Weighted Imaging - Supplies - Education pool - MR Myelography - Homepages
 
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