The gallery includes photos of medical imaging technologies from across the expo floor at the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA) 2021 annual meeting Nov. 28 - Dec. 2.
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Photo Gallery of Cardiovascular Technology on Display at RSNA 2021
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A weightless lead protection apron for use by interventionalists in the cath lab made by the Taiwanese vendor Becquerel & Sievert Co., Ltd. It offers more radiation protection than traditional lead aprons, and the weight is supported by a steel tube frame that is on wheels so the operator can move around the room.
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Arineta created a dedicated cardiac CT scanner in partnership with GE Healthcare several years ago. With increased interest in CTA with the new chest pain guidelines, the company decided to also start direct sales of these systems for the first time at RSNA in their own booth. Photos by Dave Fornell
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Viz.AI aortic dissection AI detection alert system app. Read more
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The Spectrum Dynamics Veriton SPECT-CT system at RSNA 2021. It with comes in 16, 64 or 128 slice CT configurations. It has 12 SPECT detector robotic arms that automatically move toward the patient and use a sensor to stop a few millimeters from the skin to optimize photon counts and SPECT image quality. It also uses more sensitive CZT digital detectors, which allows either faster scan times, or use of only half the radiotracer dose of analog detector scans.
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Example of life-like 3D printed cardiac and aortic anatomy available from Materialise. The vendor's software is FDA-cleared for use to print anatomy from CT or MRI studies that will be the exact size as the patient's actual anatomy. This can be used for planning and practicing complex surgical or interventional procedures and the model can aid navigation during procedures.
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GE Healthcare showed its new Allia IGS7 angiography system. It was released in 2020 and the first system is now being installed. It features an all new user interface with a set of controls duplicated on three sides of the detector head. A set of controls for the system are also available on a small cart, a taking up the same amount of floor space as an IV stand so the C-arm can be operated from anywhere in the lab. Read more