Nano-coating To Make Implants MRI Safe 56
Makarand writes "Patients who have implants containing any kind of metal cannot be MRI scanned as the powerful electromagnetic radio
waves can induce currents large enough to heat the metal in implants to over 70 C and damage surrounding tissue.
Now, Biophan, a biomedical devices company, has
developed a nano-coating material that can protect implants by preventing most of the radio waves
from reaching the internal components of the implant by reflecting them. It's high electrical
resistance also prevents currents from flowing around the implant's surface and heating
any nearby body tissue.
Biophan's coating is a mixture of poorly conducting nanoparticles
held in an insulating matrix. The coating is a mere three micrometres thick
and can cut the energy induced in an implant by 89 per cent."
Sounds like my g/f (Score:1)
Wow (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Wow (Score:2)
Wow! Safe MREs! (Score:2, Funny)
Eh? It's MRI? Darn.
Metal implants? (Score:3, Insightful)
Does anyone know what makes some metal implants worse than others? Is it just a question of size?
Re:Metal implants? (Score:2)
-Sean
Re:Metal implants? (Score:2)
[/pedant]
Re:Metal implants? (Score:3, Informative)
Many, but far from all, metals are ferromagnetic. Amalgams (compounds with mercury) in dental fillings are generally diamagnetic.
A given metal atom may pair up its electrons and become diamagnetic if it
Re:Metal implants? (Score:3, Interesting)
[Scrambled eyes, anyone?]
Re:Metal implants? (Score:2)
RE: Eye Shrapnel (Score:3, Interesting)
When I got an MRI, the doctor recommended that I get an X-Ray because I occasionally use a grinder to sharpen my lawnmower blade, but it's always a good idea to get one no matter what, at least for your first MRI.
It's inexpensive insurance against a possible cause of blindness.
I'm almost thinking it's a hose... (Score:4, Insightful)
Mr. Maxwell taught us that EM waves are reflected from conductors because any electric field that is tangential to a conductor causes charges to move to cancel out that field (thre can be no electric field inside a conductor). These moving charges are more commonly called "currents."
Insulating materials do not stop radiating fields; your radio works inside your wood framed house, doesn't it? Light propagates through the glass front of your CRT from the phosphors on the inside of the tube, doesn't it?
Seems to me that if they're worried about induced eddy current heating of the implants, would it not make more sense to use *better* conductors, not worse ones? Better conductors would have lower I-squared-R losses, resulting in less resistive heating. Take that implant, put a few micro-inches of copper on it, and then seal it up with something biologically intert (some plastic?).
Re:I'm almost thinking it's a hose... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I'm almost thinking it's a hose... (Score:2)
The website is pretty weak on details and the New Scientist article doesn't make sence.
Re:I'm almost thinking it's a hose... (Score:1)
Yes, the radio works in your house. This is becuase most of the materials in your house are transparent to radio waves (and those that are opaque to radio waves are too small
You missed something in the article (Score:3, Informative)
So what they are describing is a very poor Faraday cage embedded inside a non conducting matrix.
Like rebar inside a concrete building!
Notice how you get no cell phone reception inside? The building is acting like a Faraday cage by reflect
Re:I'm almost thinking it's a hose... (Score:2)
The sheet of white paper on my desk is a good EM reflector throughout the visible spectrum, but doesn't conduct worth a damn. I can shine a 5 Watt green laser on it and it doesn't even heat up noticeably.
so how come... (Score:1)
Re:so how come... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Like many fantasy characters, Wolverine casually violates the laws of physics and biology. Compare Logan to the cyclopses and giants of mythology, which were almost certainly based on deformed or diseased humans. Most descriptions of giants have them towering above humans. Since volume (and therefore mass of similar density material) increases with the cube of radius, most fantasy gian
Re:so how come... (Score:1)
Magnetic field? (Score:5, Informative)
The field is *powerful* -- in one case it took several of us to pull free a chunk of metal another tech had unwittingly brought into the room.
I can see how this would be useful for non-magnetic materials like most stainless (yes, there are magnetic blends of ss in the 4xx series before someone tries to correct me
(Rudimentary MRI primer: the primary field sets up a net alignment of molecules in the body, most significantly water; the RF pulses then tweak these molecules so they emit RF of their own, revealing location and quantity. Things have evolved since i was a tech, however.)
Risk of burns is well-known. (Score:2)
Re:Risk of burns is well-known. (Score:2)
Re:Risk of burns is well-known. (Score:2)
This happened recently in the hospital I work at, and while the patient wasn't seriously injured, it did cause a bit of a sti
Re:Risk of burns is well-known. (Score:2)
If the burn rate were 0.001% (This number is just pulled out of my hat to illustrate. I have no reason to believe that it has any relation to the actual frequency of burns), any given clinic could expect to perform tens of thousands of scans without seeing a single burn, but given 40 million scans [amersham.com] performed each year th
Re:Risk of burns is well-known. (Score:1)
This idea, to try to make scans available for more people, certainly benefits that sub
Re:Risk of burns is well-known. (Score:2)
Damn straight! You are correct to do so. The total number is completely irrelevant to an individual considering an exam. The right number is the probability, which you correctly focus on. The problem you're dealing with is that the patient is likely to read about a rare adverse event in the newspaper and focus on that, just as with shark attacks at beaches.
In contrast, according to the Institute of Medicine [nap.edu], any time you check into a hospital in the Un
Re:Magnetic field? (Score:2)
I'm just curious, what are the benefits of MRI vs PET or PET vs MRI? Would metal inside someone conduct positrons with a PET scanner?
Re:Magnetic field? (Score:1)
pulled out (Score:4, Interesting)
That's not the only problem- there's the whole magnetic force issue. Remember the last Bond movie, where he's in the MRI room? It's not an exaggeration- anything ferrous within a 20+ foot radius will, in fact, get picked up and pulled toward the center of the machine. That's why, unlike the Bond movies, nothing ferrous is ever supposed to be allowed into the same room.
A child at Westchester Medical Center was killed a year or two back when an oxygen cylinder against a wall was launched into the center of the MRI machine(it literally flew through the air into the center), crushing his skull.
Another "famous" incident involved a prison inmate who was not killed or injured, but the policeman guarding him lost his gun- I can't remember if it was holstered or in his hands, but it ended up hitting the MRI machine, AND discharging- not to mention I think it also partially damaged the dewar vessel surrounding the magnet. In both cases, the nurses and doctors hadn't managed to think through the most basic safety issue- NOTHING metal goes in an MRI room, PERIOD(Westchester never did publicly "figure out" how the oxygen cylinder, which never should have been in there in the first place, got there- much less why the nurses didn't remove it.)
Now, imagine if the metal object was inside your knee...forget "damaged tissue", you could end up with a face-knee transplant.
Re:pulled out (Score:3, Funny)
So really hairy men can't get MRIs either?
Re:pulled out (Score:1)
Most are titanium - but not all are... (Score:2)
Re:pulled out (Score:1)
Titanium implants (Score:2)
MRI accidents (Score:3, Informative)
But accidents happen. Perhaps you have someone unfamiliar visiting like that cop (I bet he just walked into the room before they had a chance to demetal him
PSA (Score:4, Funny)
The best thing about this technology, of course, is that we will be able to wear pace-makers into the qwikee-mart again.
Re:PSA (Score:2)
Isn't it,
Never, never, never, run with scissors in the MRI room?
Re:PSA (Score:1)
Well, hot diggity shucky-dang! Nothin' thrills me more than grabbin' a pacemaker, slappin' it in and firin' it up, and headin' down to the ol' Qwikee-Mart!
Re:PSA (Score:2)
http://radinfo.musc.edu/images/photos/MRIvsChai r 01
http://radinfo.musc.edu/images/photos/MRIvsC hair02
This happened to our brand new 3T magnet. A nurse attending a patient decided to pull a chair into the room so she could sit down. There were already wooden chairs in the room, but for some reason the person decided this chair would be better.
The magnet was down for about 3 days while serv
Links (Score:2)
http://radinfo.musc.edu/images/photos/MRIvsChair01 .jpg [musc.edu]
http://radinfo.musc.edu/images/photos/MRIvsChair02 .jpg
[musc.edu]
hmm... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:hmm... (Score:1)
On the gun issue you could probaly make the outside coating thicker and use a barrel plug of the same stuff to keep any fields going down the barrel. Course you would have to make sure that when you coat the gun you dont leave any cracks for the field to get into.
Re:hmm... (Score:2, Informative)
By the way, did anyone else think that guy mentioned in the article who died because he failed to mention his pacemaker (even when asked several times) should be nominated for a Darwin award?
Great Article! (Score:2)
Other shielding possibilities? (Score:3, Interesting)
-boredman
Re:Other shielding possibilities? (Score:2)
Oh, wait, that'd just be the "plastic" spoon then, wouldn't it?
not a nano coating (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess that would make it a microcoating?
We have a usefull word for nanoparticles as well... molecules.
High School Field Trip (Score:3, Interesting)
I tried moving the coil of wire in the opening of the MRI and didn't see anything on the bulb, so I removed it and shorted the wires together. When I placed the loop near the opening and attempted to twist it, it resisted with something like 10 ft/lbs of torqe. It was incredibly eerie having something floating in midair resist so strongly. The audio tape was almost ripped out of my hand and had the bias stripped off so it was no longer usable. When we stood the aluminum filter on its end on the patient bed and let it fall, it fell like it was submerged in a viscous liquid.
They told us that a monkey wrench takes 3 guys to pull it out and if you walk into the room with steel toed boots you can feel your legs getting pulled to the side. Very cool stuff.
In the Future (Score:2)