The take home is that we can
expect MRI technology to be used more extensively for not just CHD as skill
sets improve in the interpretation of scanning results. It always looked like it should be that sort
of go to technology and it appears to now been put into fuller service. This is all good news for patients and
medical practitioners.
MRI technology has become readily
available and that is also no longer a constraint. We are perhaps reaching the point in which we
will do full body scans for the record so that a similar scan can be done five
years later so that a comparation program can be run at a high resolution with
built in short range adjustments to sort things out. Such a program would catch any structural
anomalies rather easily and track developing joint degeneration long before it
is recognized.
The resolution of medical tools
is also now reaching a level that allows a huge amount of fine detail to be
mapped and compared. It should become
increasingly exciting.
MRI Scan 'Better' for Heart Patients
ScienceDaily (Dec. 22, 2011) — A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
scan for coronary heart disease is better than the most commonly-used
alternative, a major UK trial of heart disease patients has shown.
The findings by University
of Leeds researchers
could change the way that people with suspected heart disease are assessed,
potentially avoiding the need for tests that are invasive or use ionising
radiation.
Full results of the study, which was funded by a £1.3 million grant
from the British Heart Foundation (BHF), are published online by The
Lancet medical journal.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is a leading cause of death and
disability. In the UK ,
an estimated 2.6 million people are living with the condition, costing the NHS
£9 billion per year.
CHD is caused when vital arteries serving the heart become narrowed or
blocked by a build-up of fatty substances. This can lead to severe chest pain,
known as angina, and if the condition worsens and remains untreated, patients
may have a heart attack.
Patients with chest pain who are suspected of having angina will
typically be sent to hospital for further tests. These tests will confirm the
diagnosis of CHD and help doctors decide on the best course of treatment, which
may involve drug therapy, a balloon 'stretch and stent' procedure to open-up
narrowings in the heart's blood vessels -- or a heart bypass operation.
At the moment, patients with suspected angina are most likely to
have either an angiogram -- an invasive test where dye is injected directly
into the heart's arteries -- or a non-invasive imaging test called SPECT.
Unlike MRI scans, angiograms and SPECT tests both involve ionising radiation.
A five-year study by University
of Leeds researchers,
involving 752 patients, has now shown that an MRI scan is a reliable way of
detecting signs of significant CHD. The researchers also showed that MRI was
better than SPECT at diagnosing CHD and at ruling out heart disease in patients
who did not have the condition.
This is the first time that MRI has been compared head-to-head against
the 'gold standard' tests for CHD in such a large group of patients. The
results may now lead healthcare policy-makers to re-think guidance on the tests
that patients with suspected CHD should be offered.
"The MRI technique could be used widely and not just in the UK ,"
Dr Greenwood added. "The scans were all carried out on a standard 1.5
Tesla scanner -- exactly the type of MRI scanner that you would find in most
hospitals today."
Professor Peter Weissberg, Medical Director at the British Heart
Foundation, said: "For patients suffering with chest pains, there are a
number of tests that can be used to decide whether their symptoms are due to
coronary heart disease or not. This research shows that a full MRI scan is
better than the most commonly used alternative -- a SPECT scan using a
radioactive tracer.
"MRI has the additional advantage that it doesn't involve
radiation. At present, not all hospitals have the expertise to undertake such
scans but these findings provide clear evidence that MRI should be more widely
used in the future."
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