Subscribe to GIZMORAMA
 
Subscribe to DEAL OF THE DAY
 


fiogf49gjkf0d
Gizmorama - April 27, 2015

Good Morning,


Transportable MRI machines might be the medical tool of the future. Soon we won't have to go to the hospital, the hospital will come to us.

Learn about this and more interesting stories from the scientific community in today's issue.

Until Next Time,
Erin


P.S. Did you miss an issue? You can read every issue from the Gophercentral library of newsletters on our exhaustive archives page. Thousands of issues, all of your favorite publications in chronological order. You can read AND comment. Just click GopherArchives

***

* Researchers design transportable MRI machine *

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (UPI) - Sometimes you just need an MRI on the run. It's not a frequent problem, but for emergency medical care technicians trying to diagnose a stroke as quickly as possible, a mobile MRI scanner could mean the difference between life or death.

That was the impetus for researchers at New Zealand's Victoria University of Wellington, who recently designed a transportable MRI machine. The machine isn't yet real, only a design -- existing as a series of research papers and CAD drawings.

Their newly designed machine isn't the kind of thing that fits nicely in the back of a sedan. But it's small enough to fit snugly in the back of a flatbed truck. The plans for the machine consists of a Magnetic Resonance Imaging scanner placed inside a refrigerated shipping container.

"Unlike mobile MRIs, the MRI Ambulance is designed to be used in emergency situations alongside a standard ambulance, providing the ability for a patient who has had a stroke to be scanned en-route to the hospital," Nicole Marshall, a student who helped design the technology, explained in a press release. "It means the type of stroke is determined before the patient arrives at the hospital resulting in greater efficiency and better probability of the patient surviving and recovering."

The machine is a collaboration between researchers and students from Victoria's Robinson Research Institute and Schools of Design and Architecture.

One of the main challenges of the design process was putting together a machine that was portable but still comfortable and functional for emergency caretakers and patients. The machine allows a stretcher to be wheeled directly up to the truck bed. Stretcher wheels lock into a loading track, allowing the patient to be rolled back into place and winched up into scanning position.

Instead of using cryogen, or liquid helium coolant, to cool the magnets inside the MRI scanner, researchers employed a specialized electrical refrigerator.

This greatly increases the suitability of the magnet for transportable applications," said Robert Slade, an MRI expert at the school's research institute.

After conferring with medical professionals to ensure their plans meet the needs of emergency technicians and patients, and account for the realities of emergency medical situations, researchers hope to team with a Chinese manufacturing company to produce a working prototype.


*-- MIT physicists develop new tabletop particle detector --*

BOSTON (UPI) - The Large Hadron Collider is the largest particle collider in the world. Its circular tunnel boasts a 17-mile circumference to accelerate particles toward collision inside a detector. The latest particle detector from the labs of MIT is not much bigger than a coffee cup.

The tabletop particle detector isn't capable of smashing atoms at high speeds, of course, but it can detect electrons. And researchers suggest the magnet-based device may be able to detect neutrinos.

The detector uses a magnet to siphon off electrons from decaying gas, trapping them in a magnetic bottle. A radio antenna inside measures and maps the minute movements of the electrons.

Researchers recently used the device to observe the behavior of more than 100,000 electrons from decaying krypton gas.

"We can literally image the frequency of the electron, and we see this electron suddenly pop into our radio antenna," Joe Formaggio, an associate professor of physics at MIT, explained in a press release. "Over time, the frequency changes, and actually chirps up. So these electrons are chirping in radio waves."

Each electron "chirps" as it bumps into other atoms trapped in the detector. The sequence of chirping frequencies can reveal the patterned movement of the electrons.

Researchers believe the detector could also pick up the presence of neutrinos.

Neutrinos are theoretical subatomic particles that are neutrally charged and are seemingly impossible to detect because they don't interact with other particles.

Scientists at MIT believe their device could detect a neutrino by measuring the decaying energy of tritium, a radioactive isotope of hydrogen. When tritium decays, it turns into an isotope of helium and, as a byproduct, expels an electron and a neutrino.

The laws of particle physics suggest the energy of expelled particles adds up to the original energy of the parent neutron. By measuring the energy of electrons given off by decaying tritium, researchers believe they'll be able to deduce the mass of a neutrino.

Researchers have already established theoretical limits for the neutrino's mass, but they don't have direct evidence.

"We have [the mass] cornered, but haven't measured it yet," Formaggio says. "The name of the game is to measure the energy of an electron -- that's your signature that tells you about the neutrino."

Formaggio and his colleagues believe their new detector gives them a chance to capture that signature.

But while neutrino experts are encouraged, they say the device will need to be improved. First, its particle-holding cell will need to enlarged to hold more tritium. Researchers must also do the difficult work of tuning an extra-sensitive radio antenna to the precise frequency.

"This was the first step, albeit a very important step, along the way to building a next-generation experiment," said Steven Elliott, a technical staff member at the Los Alamos National Laboratory who did not contribute to the research. "As a result, the neutrino community is very impressed with the concept and execution of this experiment."

The particle detector is detailed in the latest issue of the journal Physical Review Letters.

Missed an Issue? Visit the Gizmorama Archives