The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, a major acute teaching hospital in Scotland and part of NHS Lothian, has recently installed two new AI-assisted CT scanners from Canon Medical. Designed using Deep Learning Reconstruction, the systems are powered by an Advanced intelligent Clear-IQ Engine (AiCE) to deliver high quality medical imaging at speed to overcome the time vs patient demand challenge that most hospitals face today.
A range of software applications also expands the procedures and possibilities for clinical practice and research.
In CT Pulmonary Angiography, iodine mapping is used as standard which provides the radiologists with extra information to aid diagnosis. A greater level of information delivered more quickly is better for clinical decision-making and is now achieved at lower dose. Similarly, Interventional Radiologists have found the subtraction package for CT Peripheral Angiograms extremely valuable. This provides excellent visualisation of the vessels, replacing the need to see vascular calcification via an MRI scan, which is not suitable for many patients, but still with reassurance of the dose being low. All of the processing is done automatically by the CT.
Furthermore, using the CT fluoroscopy package, the time taken to undertake biopsies has halved, therefore reducing examination times for patients undergoing uncomfortable procedures.