PEI

'We're fully digital now': New diagnostic imaging equipment for QEH

Two new and expensive pieces of diagnostic equipment have arrived and are already in use at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. The hospital's new SPECT Camera and CT, along with and a state of the art X-ray suite have been operational since June.

The new equipment will provide more detail and more information for diagnosis

The Queen Elizabeth Hospital recently installed $1.5 million worth of diagnostic imaging equipment including a SPECT Camera. (Tom Steepe/CBC)

Two new and expensive pieces of diagnostic equipment have arrived and are already in use at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital.

The hospital's new SPECT Camera and CT, along with and a state of the art X-ray suite have been operational since June.

"SPECT stands for Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography, which enables us to go around the patient and produce images through slices at different angles for the physician to look at, so it gives you the whole body through," explained nuclear medicine technologist Corrine Bell.

'Fusion or hybrid imaging'

The SPECT Camera with CT unit works quickly, producing a sharper, more detailed image than previously in just a matter of minutes.

"Two units in one. It's called fusion or hybrid imaging. Nuclear medicine has kind of changed now. We're called molecular imaging because we're using a radioactive component."

The hospital's new x-ray suite is fully digital replacing an analog system. (Tom Steepe/CBC)

It means less time patient have to spend in the room.

"The GAMMA camera's very sensitive and the CT camera enhances specificity, so the radiologist reporting will have an easier time discerning what a sensitive area or a hot spot as we call them on the images would be, so a greater level of detail for diagnosis," said Gailyne MacPherson, provincial director of diagnostic imaging for Health PEI.

'Most accurate diagnosis'

The pieces of equipment cost $1.5 million, paid for by donors in the community.

"It is very important to have the latest equipment to make sure that we give the most accurate diagnosis that we can to patients, and that we are able to provide the best service that's possible for people," said MacPherson.

The $1.5 million in diagnostic imaging equipment was purchased through donations from the community. (Tom Steepe/CBC)

With the replacement of the X-ray machine, it marks the first time the QEH has been fully digital.

"Definitely having a CT attached to the images gives the physician, the radiologist a much better image," added Bell.

"Orthopedic surgeons doing surgery, we do studies for melanomas where they're taking lymph vessels out, and it gives them the exact position that that lymph vessel is, and that's just one little dot in a whole body. So, now with the CT incorporated, they have actual visual, so they know in their mind's eye exactly where that lesion or where that lymph node is."

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