Market competition rather than clinical need may have been the driving force behind
handheld portable ultrasound systems, but today the potential uses for the technology
appear limitless.
Ever since prehistoric times, when Fred Flintstone used a rock
camera with a stone-chiseling bird inside to make pictures, innovators have sought ways to
lighten up imaging equipment. OK, maybe it only seems like ages. But recently, advances in
computerization have upped the stakes considerably, especially in the compact ultrasound
market. While CT and MRI got bigger and costlier, ultrasound got smaller, sharper, cheaper
and more versatile its advantage, in short, over the dino-cams.
Curiously, compact ultrasound is something of a form-before-function case study. Market
competition rather than clinical need is the true reason it exists in the first place,
although uses for it now seem limitless. So maintains Shahram Vaezy, Ph.D., associate
director for education at the University of Washington Center for Industrial and Medical
Ultrasound (Seattle) and research assistant professor of bioengineering at its Applied
Physics Laboratory. A lot of companies have realized that in order for ultrasound
imaging to survive in the medical imaging community, they need to have highly portable,
basically handheld, devices. They are really a decision that ultrasound companies have
made to compete with MRI and CT.
At the last AIUM [American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine, Laurel, Md.]
meeting [in March], one of the main issues was that ultrasound was really relying on
providing real-time information [to stay competitive]. Right now, MRI and CT are
approaching that, and of course they have features that ultrasound cannot offer, like
contrast for organ definition. However, notes Vaezy, MRI and CT will probably never
fit neatly on anyones lap. Thats why a lot of the companies are entering
into this market.
Please refer to the September 2002
issue for the complete story.
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Martin St. Denis