• 14Aug


    Image Source:www.ex-astris-scientia.org

    Rutherford-Appleton Laboratories have developed one of the World´s largest imagers that could form the heart of future medical scanners. The new technology will allow doctors to produce more sensitive and faster images of the human body at a lower-cost to the healthcare profession.

    The innovative technology, which has been developed as part of the £4.5m Basic Technology MI-3 Consortium, will help in providing instant analysis of medical screening tests and the early detection of cancer.

    Easier to use and faster than the imagers used in current body scanners, and with very large active pixel sensors with an imaging area of approximately 6cm square, the technology has been specifically developed to meet demanding clinical applications such as x-ray imaging and mammography. This silicon imager is about 15 times larger in area than the latest Intel processors.

    The next step of the project is to produce wafer-scale imagers which can produce images that approach the width of the human torso. This will eliminate the need for expensive and inefficient lenses and so enable lower-cost, more sensitive and faster medical imaging systems. Very large active pixel sensors could soon be making a major impact on medical imaging by further reducing the need for the old technology of film. The UK is a World-lead in such sensors for scientific and medical applications and this is a lead that UK intends to maintain.

  • 23Feb
    Categories: Vaccines Comments: 0

    free.jpg
    A painless flu vaccination technique was being developed by spraying viral genes directly through the skin. The vaccines are DNA-based. A few genes from the DNA of the flu virus are used to make a vaccine – the process of which is faster and safer. The vaccine is shot at the skin using a needle-free device. The DNA that gets in contact with the skin cells produces the strong immune response.

    This technique is envisioned to replace the traditional methods of developing flu vaccines wherein chicken eggs are used. The old method takes too long. With the new method, an outbreak may be prevented if suitable vaccines are developed at a shorter time, and are administered to patients before it’s too late.

    (reference)

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