IWK Health Centre unveils new hybrid imaging machine - Action News
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Nova Scotia

IWK Health Centre unveils new hybrid imaging machine

The IWK Health Centre has unveiled a new $1.2 million device to help better detect cancer and other illnesses in children.

The $1.2M machine was paid for by the Nova Scotia government and IWK Foundation

Introducing the IWK Health Centre's new SPECT/CT machine

9 years ago
Duration 0:50
The IWK Health Centre has unveiled a new $1.2 million device to help detect cancer and other illnesses in children.

The IWK Health Centre has unveiled a new $1.2million device to help better detect cancer and other illnesses in children.

The new machine is called the Adventure Series SPECT/CT and is madeby General Electric. It's designed to capture a combination of images to provide better anatomical detail of patients, which results in a more accurate diagnosis, says Dr. SteveBurrell, a physician of nuclear medicine at the IWK.

He says the machine combines two types of scanners into one.

"So at its heart, [it's] a nuclear medicine camera which images what we sometimes refer to as function or physiology. And it's a CT scanner which images structure and anatomy. And sometimes to arrive at the optimal diagnosis, you really have to fuse those two," said Burrell.

To make the big machine a little less scary, the room it inhabits has been built witha jungle theme, bright colours and aplayful atmosphere.

"It's a room that's really built with a child's eye in mind," saidSandra MacDonald, a nuclear medicine technologist at the IWK.

She says the room was designed to be interesting to them, but also to relievetheir stress and anxiety.

As part of the purchase, General Electricwill use theroom as a showroom to make sales pitches to other hospitals in North America.

'The kids are more relaxed'

Even after spending up to an hour under a nuclear imaging panel, some kids don't want to leave, says MacDonald.

"The kids are more relaxed and then that has an effect on their parents. And their parents are more relaxed and that has decreased everyone's stress level right off the get-go," she said.

However, no matter how kid-friendly the room is, some kids don't do so well inside animaging machine.In those cases, children are sedated.After the child is settled, the machine goes to work.

The images captured are able to precisely detect childhood cancers, infections and bone disorders.

The province covered three-quarters of the cost of the machine.The IWK Foundation covered the rest.