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Jerusalem, April 29, 2008 – A process to transmit medical images via
cellular phones that has been developed by a Hebrew University of
Jerusalem researcher has the potential to provide sophisticated
radiological diagnoses and treatment to the majority of the world’s
population lacking access to such technology. This would include millions
in developing nations as well as those in rural areas of developed
countries who live considerable distances from modern medical centers.
Prof. Boris Rubinsky has demonstrated the feasibility of his new
concept that can replace current systems -- which are based on
conventional, stand-alone medical imaging devices -- with a new medical
imaging system consisting of two independent components connected through
cellular phone technology. The concept could be developed with various
medical imaging modalities. This new technique is described in the latest
online issue of the journal, Public Library of Science ONE (PLoS ONE).
Rubinsky is head of the Research Center for Research in Bioengineering
in the Service of Humanity and Society at the Benin School of Computer
Science and Engineering at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and is also
a professor of bioengineering and mechanical engineering at the University
of California, Berkeley. Working with him on this project were Yair Granot
and Antoni Ivorra, both of the Biophysics Graduate Group of the latter
institution.
Their invention is jointly patented and owned by Yissum, the Hebrew
University’s Technology Transfer Company, and by the University of
California, Berkeley. Commercialization efforts will be made by Yissum and
by Berkeley's technology transfer organization.
According to the World Health Organization, some three-quarters of the
world's population has no access to ultrasounds, X-rays, magnetic
resonance images and other medical imaging technology used for a wide
range of applications, from detecting tumors to confirming signs of active
tuberculosis infections to monitoring the health of developing fetuses
during pregnancy.
The conventional medical imaging systems in use today -- self-contained
units combining data acquisition hardware with software processing
hardware and imaging display -- are expensive devices demanding sensitive
handling and maintenance and extensive user training. Only those treatment
centers with the required financial and manpower resources are usually
able to acquire and utilize them. Even when such equipment does exist in
developing countries, it is often not in use because it is too
sophisticated or in disrepair or because the health personnel are not
trained to use it, said Rubinsky..
"Imaging is considered one of the most important achievements in modern
medicine. Diagnosis and treatment of an estimated 20 percent of diseases
would benefit from medical imaging, yet this advancement has been out of
reach for millions of people in the world because the equipment is too
costly to maintain. Our system would make imaging technology inexpensive
and accessible for these underserved populations," said Rubinsky.
Under the new technology developed by Rubinsky, an independent data
acquisition device (DAD) at a remote patient site that is simple with
limited controls and no image display capability would be connected via
cellular phone technology with an advanced image reconstruction and
hardware control multiserver unit at a central site (which can be anywhere
in the world).
The cellular phone technology transmits unprocessed, raw data from the
patient site DAD to the cutting- edge central facility that has the
sophisticated software and hardware required for image reconstruction.
This data is then returned from the central facility to the cellular phone
at the DAD site in the form of an image and displayed on its screen. "The
DAD can be made with off-the-shelf parts that somebody with basic
technical training can operate,” Rubinsky noted.
The fact that the image itself is produced in a centralized location
and not on the measurement device has the potential to make technological
advances in medical imaging processing continuously available to remote
areas of the world, which despite their lack of sophisticated equipment in
general often do have cell phone communication. (Indeed, it is estimated
that more than 60 percent of all cell phones currently in use in the world
are in developing countries.)
Rubinsky stresses the key economic benefits of this new method: By
simplifying the apparatus at the patient site, it reduces the cost of
medical imaging devices in general. It also removes the need for advanced
imaging training of the personnel at the patient site.
The researchers chose electrical impedance tomography (EIT) to
demonstrate the feasibility of using cell phones in medical imaging. EIT
is based upon the principle that diseased tissue transmits electrical
currents differently from healthy tissue. The difference in resistance
from electrical currents is translated into an image, which can be
transmitted via cell phone technology.
Utilizing commercially available parts, the research team built a
simple data acquisition device for the experiment. The device had 32
stainless steel electrodes – half to inject the electrical current and the
other half to measure the voltage – connected to a gel-filled container
that simulated breast tissue with a tumor.
A total of 225 voltage measurements were taken and uploaded to a cell
phone, which was hooked up to the device with a USB cable. The cell phone
was then used to dial into a powerful central computer that contained
software to process the packet of raw data that was transmitted. An image
was then reconstructed and sent back to the cell phone for viewing. The
researchers verified that the simulated tumor was clearly visible in the
image, demonstrating the proof-of-principle that this system is feasible.
The work on this project was supported by the National Center for
Research Resources at the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the Israel
Science Foundation and Florida Hospital in Orlando. Research is continuing
to further develop the technology with various imaging modalities.
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