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Result : Searchterm 'SPIR' found in 8 terms [] and 81 definitions []
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Searchterm 'SPIR' was also found in the following services: 
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News  (17)  Resources  (5)  Forum  (8)  
 
Mallinckrodt, Inc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Manufacturers -
 
www.mallinckrodt.com Mallinckrodt, a Tyco Healthcare company makes and distributes products for respiratory care; bulk and dosage pharmaceuticals, primarily for pain relief and addiction therapy; and imaging agents for magnetic resonance, ultrasound, X-ray, and nuclear medicine applications. With worldwide manufacturing and distribution facilities, as well as worldwide sales offices, Mallinckrodt sells its products worldwide.
GastroMARK® is marketed in the United States by Mallinckrodt, Inc.

In June 2007 Tyco International Ltd. completed the separation of its healthcare business, which is named Covidien. Mallinckrodt, Inc. is now part of Covidien Ltd.

MRI Contrast Agents:
Contact Information
MAIL
Mallinckrodt, Inc.
675 McDonnell Blvd.
Hazelwood, MO 63042
USA
PHONE
US: (888)744-1414
International: +1-314-654-3177
FAX
+1-314-654-5380
E-MAIL
Imaging Products Customer Service:
US: Imaging Customer Service
International: icsstl@mkg.com
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Guerbet Completes Acquisition of Mallinckrodt’s Contrast Media and Delivery Systems Business
Sunday, 29 November 2015   by www.itnonline.com    
  News & More:
Covidien Completes Spin Off, Mallinckrodt Starts Trading On NYSE
Monday, 1 July 2013   by www.rttnews.com    
MRI Resources 
Used and Refurbished MRI Equipment - Journals - Diffusion Weighted Imaging - Education pool - MRA - Non-English
 
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 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    
MRI Resources 
Guidance - Patient Information - Abdominal Imaging - Databases - Shoulder MRI - Corporations
 
Motion Probing Gradient
 
Many MR imaging techniques using Motion Probing Gradients (MPG's) such as Spin Echo (SE), Stimulated Echo (STE), Rapid Acquisition with Relaxation Enhancement (RARE), Turbo-SE, and SE-EPI (Echo Planar Imaging for Spin echo acquisition), Spiral imaging, and Projection reconstruction including PROPELLER are applicable to DWI. In diffusion weighted imaging, 2 MPG's are required. The MPG's are put symmetrically into both sides of a 180° or 90° RF pulse to change the direction of the magnetized spin in the X-Y plane for spin echo or stimulated echo acquisition.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Diffusion Imaging: From Basic Physics to Practical Imaging
1999   by ej.rsna.org    
  News & More:
Motion Compensation in MR Imaging
   by ccn.ucla.edu    
Searchterm 'SPIR' was also found in the following services: 
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Nerve Conductivity
 
Rapid echo planar imaging and high-performance MRI gradient systems create fast-switching magnetic fields that can stimulate muscle and nerve tissues produced by either changing the electrical resistance or the potential of the excitation. There are apparently no effects on the conduction of impulses in the nerve fiber up to field strength of 0.1 T. A preliminary study has indicated neurological effects by exposition to a whole body imager at 4.0 T. Theoretical examinations argue that field strengths of 24 T are required to produce a 10% reduction of nerve impulse conduction velocity.
Nerve stimulations during MRI scans can be induced by very rapid changes of the magnetic field. This stimulation may occur for example during diffusion weighted sequences or diffusion tensor imaging and can result in muscle contractions caused by effecting motor nerves. The so-called magnetic phosphenes are attributed to magnetic field variations and may occur in a threshold field change of between 2 and 5 T/s. Phosphenes are stimulations of the optic nerve or the retina, producing a flashing light sensation in the eyes. They seem not to cause any damage in the eye or the nerve.
Varying magnetic fields are also used to stimulate bone-healing in non-unions and pseudarthroses. The reasons why pulsed magnetic fields support bone-healing are not completely understood. The mean threshold levels for various stimulations are 3600 T/s for the heart, 900 T/s for the respiratory system, and 60 T/s for the peripheral nerves.
Guidelines in the United States limit switching rates at a factor of three below the mean threshold for peripheral nerve stimulation. In the event that changes in nerve conductivity happens, the MRI scan parameters should be adjusted to reduce dB/dt for nerve stimulation.
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Further Reading:
  Basics:
Electrical eddy currents in the human body: MRI scans and medical implants
   by www.phy.olemiss.edu    
  News & More:
NERVE STIMULATORS
Tuesday, 18 January 2005   by www.health.adelaide.edu.au    
Conductivity tensor mapping of the human brain using diffusion tensor MRI
   by www.pnas.org    
MRI Resources 
Cardiovascular Imaging - Resources - MRI Accidents - Intraoperative MRI - Lung Imaging - Blood Flow Imaging
 
OPART™InfoSheet: - Devices -
Intro, 
Types of Magnets, 
Overview, 
etc.MRI Resource Directory:
 - Devices -
 
www3.toshiba.co.jp/medical/products/mr/opart/index.htm From Toshiba America Medical Systems Inc.;
OPART™ is a 0.35 T superconducting open MR system featuring cryogenless operation. Superconducting speed and performance are combined with the patient access advantages of open MRI design for unmatched clinical versatility. OPART™ features innovative technologies such as digital RF, high speed gradients and optimized RF coils, which support advanced MRI applications.
Device Information and Specification
CLINICAL APPLICATION
Whole body
CONFIGURATION
Quadrature, solenoid and multi-channel configurations
SYNCHRONIZATION
ECG/peripheral optional, respiratory gating
PULSE SEQUENCES
SE, FE, IR, FastSE, FastIR, FastFLAIR, Fast STIR, FastFE, FASE, Hybrid EPI, Multi Shot EPI; Angiography: 2D(gate/non-gate)/3D TOF, SORS-STC
IMAGING MODES
Single, multislice, volume study
55 cm, vertical opening
POWER REQUIREMENTS
380/400/415/440/480 V
COOLING SYSTEM TYPE
Cryogenless
STRENGTH
25 mT/m
Passive, active
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MRI Resources 
Raman Spectroscopy - MRI Technician and Technologist Career - Absorption and Emission - Lung Imaging - Veterinary MRI - NMR
 
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