GE HealthCare’s growing list of medical institutions conducting human subject research studies with its novel photon counting CTi technology further expands with the addition of Stanford Medicine
- Unique from current CT technology, GE HealthCare’s proprietary photon counting CT design is engineered to leverage Deep Silicon detectors with the goal of capturing more patient data for clearer images and detailed information to help inform diagnoses across care areas
-
Researchers at Stanford Medicine will collaborate with
GE HealthCare for the intended future benefit of clinicians and patients – scanning human subjects on a prototype system as part of a research study to assess the developing technology and provide helpful insights for its evolution
Photon counting CT technology has the potential to further improve the capabilities of traditional CT, including the visualization of minute details of organ structures, improved tissue characterization, more accurate material density measurement (or quantification), and lower radiation dose. Altogether, it has the promise to be a substantial step forward for CT imaging that can potentially benefit millions of patients worldwide.
“As a CT researcher, it is especially exciting to see this new advancement in CT technology,” shares
Stanford Medicine researchers will facilitate human subject research and produce technical feedback to test and help advance GE HealthCare’s photon counting CT technology with Deep Silicon. The study will assess reconstruction methods, image presentation workflows, and clinical benefits for specific pathologies and disease types to help optimize GE HealthCare’s patented technology to enable better visualization and utilization.
Achieving greater depth with Deep Silicon technology
From the first x-ray machines to the first silicon-based photon counting prototype,
After three decades of research and development,
As a semi-conductor material, silicon has a number of advantages including its purity, abundance, and broad manufacturing infrastructure. Historically, the main challenge with the use of silicon as a detector material is that it is too thin to stop and collect a sufficient number of x-ray photons.
“The installation of this
The prototype installation at Stanford Medicine comes less than a year after
“The collaborative spirit shared by Stanford Medicine, UW—Madison,
For more information on GE HealthCare’s unique approach to photon counting CT with deep silicon detectors, visit gehealthcare.com.
i Technology in development that represents ongoing research and development efforts. These technologies are not products and may never become products. Not for sale. Not cleared or approved by the
ii The study is being conducted with the approval of the Institutional Review Boards.
iii The statements by GE HealthCare’s customers described here are based on their own opinions and on results that were achieved in the customer’s unique setting. Since there is no “typical” hospital and many variables exist, i.e. hospital size, case mix, etc.. there can be no guarantee that other customers will achieve the same results.
iv A trademark of
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20231009745233/en/
GE HealthCare Media Contact:
M +1 608 381 8829
margaret.steinhafel@ge.com
Source: