MGH Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging 2016 | Page 10

advances in imaging technology ‘GOBrain’ Protocol For MRI Makes Brain Exams Faster, More Comfortable For Patients The protocol is a product of a longstanding collaboration with Siemens Healthcare Time is one of the great challenges with magnetic resonance imaging. This is especially true in the context of the clinical exam. The typical MRI brain exam can take 20, 30 or even 40 minutes, and this produces a significant burden. A burden in terms of cost and efficiency, stemming from the relatively low throughput with MR imaging. But more importantly a burden to the patient, who needs to lie very still in the scanner for long periods of time, a requirement that often proves uncomfortable and even distressing. All of this could soon change. The MGH Martinos Center and Seimens Healthcare have together developed an application, called GOBrain, that can reduce the length of the typical MRI exam by up to eight times, allowing clinically relevant brain scans in only five minutes. Siemens introduced GOBrain at the November 2015 meeting of the Radiological Society of North America; FDA approval was announced in April. The development of GOBrain was a response to a particular clinical need at MGH: namely, the need to improve the throughput of MRI brain exams. Installing more scanners wouldn’t be practical given the hospital’s dense urban campus, said Bruce Rosen, the Director of the Martinos Center, so they would have to do this by reducing the length of individual exams. the healthcare giant to improve MRI through a range of technological advances. Among these: advances in “parallel imaging,” which enables faster and more precise scanning through the use of multiple “coils.” the detectors of the radiofrequency signal in MR imaging. The Center has devoted a tremendous amount of time and effort to developing parallel imaging. Over the past 20+ years, its researchers have focused on designing and building larger and larger detector arrays, taking advantage of increases in the number of channels in MRI scanners, which has grown from a single channel in the early 1990s to as many as 128 channels today. This need dovetailed with work coming out of a longstanding collaboration between the Martinos Cen- The initial goal with the arrays was ter and Siemens. For more than 15 to increase the quality of the imyears, the Center has partnered with ages acquired, but it turned out this