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Cheap Blood Clot Detection Device
Posted by
kdawson
on Sun Apr 15, 2007 08:06 PM
from the but-wear-your-helmet dept.
from the but-wear-your-helmet dept.
Gearoid_Murphy writes "The BBC details the news of a cheap handheld device to detect blood clots on the surface of the brain. The device uses infrared light to penetrate 3 cm into the body; light that has passed through clotted blood changes detectably. A doctor who is testing the device in India said, 'We found a 98% accuracy for showing blood clots or haematomas.'"
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Woah.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Star Treknology (Score:2)
What's next? Warp drive [slashdot.org]?
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I don't think so, though I'm usually wrong. Engineers (try to) create things; scientists (try to) explain things.
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And provides a lot more information than this handheld gadget can. Given a choice, I'd opt for some real imaging rather than a high-tech studfinder.
Re:Woah.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
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Errr... (Score:5, Informative)
Aside from the fact that a lot of the time, we're more worried about post-op *bleeding* (which we'd see on CT) than simple clotting, I'm not sure how you'd tell appropriate clotting from dangerous clot, *except* through monitoring symptoms. Its not the clots after surgery that are dangerous, but when the clots are in areas that suffocate healthy tissue (ischemia).
And a CT looking for new infarct would be useless. An MRI might help, but not a CT.
And, yes, IAAD.
Parent
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Re:Woah.. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Woah.. (Score:4, Insightful)
This will help determine if patients need immediate attention.
As long as the false positive rates aren't high and this device is sensitive enough to detect the common cases, it will be useful.
Parent
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I can see this tech being used some day to detect clots in legs, arms, etc.
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Was that in the US ? If so, then maybe the insurance companies over there should think about sending the less urgent cases on an all-expenses-paid vacation to Europe that includes the MRI scan. It'd save them a whole lot of money. Maybe they can even include a business class flight, too.
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To stem the statistical comments: (Score:5, Interesting)
Before that person is you, think of the 98% that lived. I bet they're pretty happy that their chances of detection and survival went way up. And if you were sitting on an operating table in rural India with a poorly underfunded doctor wondering what's going wrong with you, wouldn't you like to take those odds too?
Re:To stem the statistical comments: (Score:5, Insightful)
Say 98% lived with this new tech. What percentage lived without it ? Maybe 94%. You can't infer that the previous methods of detection/avoidance were mediocre just because the new method has a high success rate. The article certainly gives no comparisons.
Parent
Re:To stem the statistical comments: (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd also be interested in the false positive / false negative rates, and the overall rate of blood clots.
Eg, suppose 1 in 10 patients develop blood clots under some circumstances. You could get a 90% accuracy by making a device that just reports "No clots" every time. If you're classifying 98% of clots as clots and 98% of nonclots as nonclots, over 1000 tests you'll have 98 blood clots correctly identified, 2 missed, and 18 nonclots misclassified as clots..
(obviously I have no idea what the true rate of blood clots is)
Of course, the engineers who made the device and the scientists who test it almost certainly know all this, so I'm not being particularly insightful. If they call it a breakthrough or think it will be useful, then they're probably right. We just can't tell either way from the article...
("Mainstream news article lacks useful details: film at 11!")
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Re:To stem the statistical comments: (Score:5, Informative)
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Please mod parent up (Score:2)
You don't understand, grasshopper (Score:2)
The complaints about accuracy are for cases where the false positives are (A) a lot more than the new positives detected by the new method, and (B) the consequences for a fal
Company Website... (Score:4, Informative)
Looks like they're based in PA, USA... But due to US regulations, they aren't allowed to test the device on patients in the US, and have outsourced such clinical testing to India.
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Re:Company Website... (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
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Ever see the movie Constant Gardener?
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An infrared beam that penetrates 3 cm, through the skull? I could imagine that being dangerous. For example, it might have enough energy to damage tissue. I assume that they've tried to rule that out, but sometimes the messy reality doesn't match the theory.
If you're not fam
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Though the specific power levels are not mentioned in TFA, the fact that it's a handheld device and requires a shroud lends credence to that idea.
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Ever the cynic, I would guess that the device and the procedure are relatively inexpensive and all parties involved are working out how best to monetize (god I hate that word).
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I don't know... If they can shine IR through a skull, bounce it off of a blood clot, and back through the skull, it's got to be fairly "bright". That's something like 2cm worth of bone that the light is shining through, and it's not like human skulls are made of crystal.
Doctor who? (Score:2)
Doctor Who spotted in India!
I wonder (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I wonder (Score:5, Funny)
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Damn straight!! I'm getting laid right no-o-oh, oh oooh yeah!
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I heard people with claustrophilia get kicks out of that.
A marvelous invention! (Score:4, Funny)
The Slashdot blood test (Score:5, Funny)
How it works (Score:5, Informative)
In the infrared part, oxyhemoglobin absorbs less light than desoxyhemoglobin ; it's the contrary in the red part. So if we shoot these near-infrared wavelengths (and some more, to get a good idea of the absorption spectrum) in the head and detect it somewhere else (around 5-6cm from the source), we can get information on the concentration and oxygen level of the hemoglobin in the middle of the emitter and the detector. If the hemoglobin is more present than somewhere else in the head, and it's less oxygenated than usually, we get a good idea that there's something wrong there.
Other advantages : infrared light is non-ionizing, so it's absolutely no dangerous to use that kind of instrument continuously on a person until we are sure there's no problem.
It's brilliant and I'm glad to see that kind of instrument emerging.
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A kitchen broiler is also non-ionizing radiation, but I suspect using it "continuously" on someone's brain is not such a good idea.
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Everyone here seems to be looking at the products value in terms of the US medical industry which is a very different thing to the rest of the world. The US model is incredibly expensive but also h
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The problem is - you'll still need to find an available OR with the corresponding OR team and a neurosurgeon. They're usually where the nearest CT scanner is and have similar waiting lists.
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No, your missing the point - stop thinking US medicine practicies and facilities. I watched the BBC news item about this. A guy came in after a bike crash. At the side of the bed they scanned him, found a clot gave him a local, drilled a hole in his head and drained it - jobe done.
They interviewed the poor sap just hours later 'How do you feel?' (shellshocked and quiet voice) 'Better'.
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Ouch.
The device probably doesn't tell you whether the bleeding is epidural or subdural. If it's the former, you _might_ be able to get away with the simple procedure you describe, but if it's the latter, you better get the neurosurgeon, and fast.
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Have to admit ignorence and not know the difference but if it helps, they drilled 3 holes, took out a triangular section of bone and flushed the area with a clear solution (saline?).
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Cheap?! (Score:3, Funny)
Who are you to call my blood clots cheap?!
False alarms? (Score:2, Insightful)
Could you scan a whole head? (Score:2)
I wonder if the same tech could also be used to detect DVT too? They could build it into the X-Ray machine at airports so that on the way in and out and a bell would ring if it found a blood clot in your legs (it would make sense to detect them on the way in too!)
Doctor Who? (Score:2)
Thanks, I'll be here all week.