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Before PET/CT
Over the past centaury medical technology has been evolving at an astonishing
rate. New medical conditions and new health problems have been the catalysts
for new medical discoveries and no one area of medicine has been more improved
than the field of diagnostic medicine.
From the industrial revolutions of various countries to the numerous wars and
natural disasters that have occurred throughout recent history, medical technology
has benefited each time by the need of society to progress and develop new cures
and diagnosis techniques to spot problems in the first instance or before they
progress.
X-rays were the first real diagnosis technique to aid medicine when Wilhelm
Roentgen discovered them in 1895. After X-rays more advanced forms of diagnosis
technique became available to physicians with the development of MRI (Magnetic
Resonance Imaging) in the 1950’s. This development allowed doctors to look at
internal organs for lesions and tumors.
The development of MRI preceded a more intense era of medical technological
development that focused more on the process of imaging various parts of the
body, such as brain, abdomen etc and using computers as the viewing mechanism.
As cancer became the most common medical condition other diagnostic tools developed
to supplement MRI, or complement it, aiding the treatment of this disease. New
techniques such as Positron Emission Tomography (PET scans) that look at the
chemical functioning of the bodies internal organs and Computed Tomography (CT
scans) that allow a more detailed look at the anatomy of the body became more
common in medical diagnosis, as the medical imaging revolution progressed.
Although MRI, PET and CT allowed physicians a more detailed look at how the
body functions in relation to diseases, such as cancer, there were still some
gaps in the technologies.
Image technologies focused mainly on only one aspect of a disease, such as
the anatomical structure or the functional change. Although highly beneficial
as sources of information to guide physicians in planning treatments these types
of individual imaging systems could be more powerful as one unit.
In 1998 the stage was set for a new wave of medical imaging systems when the
first prototype PET/CT scanner was given for trial to the University of Pittsburgh.
This combined Positron Emission Tomography and Computed Tomography system overcame
the faults of the individual systems and gave Doctors a more powerful tool in
the fights against cancer, brain disorders and cardiac problems.
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