Cincinnati ER to use Toshiba AquilionOne CT system

Greater Cincinnati area residents and patients of St. Elizabeth Medical Center will soon have access to the AquilionOne from Toshiba America Medical Systems.

The AquilionOne, a dynamic volume CT system, can help doctors diagnose stroke and heart disease in minutes, according to the Tustin, Calif.-based Toshiba. St. Elizabeth, which serves more than 300 stroke patients annually, is the first U.S. community hospital to install the technology in an ER setting.

The company said that its Aquilion One also will be used for cardiology, neurology, vascular care and orthopedics. The medical center currently performs more than 500 open heart procedures each year.

Toshiba’s said its AquilionOne CT system utilizes 320 ultra-high resolution detector rows (0.5 mm in width) to image an entire organ in a single gantry rotation. The result produces a 4D clinical video showing up to 16 cm of anatomical coverage, enough to capture the entire brain or heart, and show its movement such as blood flow.

Around the web

RBMA President Peter Moffatt discusses declining reimbursement rates, recruiting challenges and the role of artificial intelligence in transforming the industry.

Deepak Bhatt, MD, director of the Mount Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital and principal investigator of the TRANSFORM trial, explains an emerging technique for cardiac screening: combining coronary CT angiography with artificial intelligence for plaque analysis to create an approach similar to mammography.

A total of 16 cardiology practices from 12 states settled with the DOJ to resolve allegations they overbilled Medicare for imaging agents used to diagnose cardiovascular disease.