Eureka
Home Advertise Magazine Events Eureka TV Directory
  


Subscribe




Anti-terror system finds cancers
09/09/2010 Email to a friend   Comment on this article
Tom Shelley reports on the adaptation of a technology used to find weapons to identifying breast cancer.

Anti terror system finds cancersTerahertz imaging, much publicised because it can identify non-metallic threats under the clothes of possible terrorists, can also be used to correctly identify cancerous tissue in the human breast during the course of an operation.

Working in the 1,000 GHz, 0.3mm wavelength band, the technology also has many potential applications in non-destructive examination of composites and integrated circuits.

TeraView chief operating officer Padraig O'Kelly explained that women in the west have a one in eight lifetime risk of contracting breast cancer. In 60% to 70% of cases, it is common practice to remove only cancerous parts of a breast, rather than the whole organ. However, without a quantitative, real-time method of identifying whether all diseased material has been removed during an operation, 20 to 25% of patients – more than 4,000 in the UK in any one year – are called back for an additional operation to remove further material. This is expensive, traumatic for the patient, and may delay patient adjuvant therapy.

The TeraView probe can solve this problem. It uses the same technology as the weapon-detecting system that is in service at US Defence establishments and which is being considered for deployments at UK airports. In the approach, based on work by Professor Michael Pepper and colleagues at Toshiba Labs, a gallium arsenide substrate is struck with a 90fs pulse of near infra red light, resulting in a 500fs pulse of TeraHertz radiation. Power levels are extremely low and there is absolutely no risk to the patient.

In a two-year development and ex vivo test programme part funded by the Technology Strategy Board, it was found that 90% of cancers and 81% of normal tissue, adipose and fibrous, were distinguished correctly. The overall proportion correctly identified was 82%.

A prototype machine is currently undergoing trials at Guy's Hospital in London. This is a system mounted on a trolley, with a probe on an umbilical and a window on the end of the probe. Terahertz radiation is sensitive to water but, while this causes some problems, O'Kelly points out: "It's the water-sensitivity that helps show up the cancer."

The system is not intended to replace biopsies, but to be able to assist the surgeon during the course of an operation – DCIS – Ductal Carcinoma In Situ. The next stage in development is to be multi-centre trials, and then commercialisation. O'Kelly said: "We are now seeking partners with a track record in delivery of scientific instrumentation to help fund the planned multi-centre trials in 2011 and to commercialise the resulting medical device."
Other potential medical applications include the detection of cancerous sentinel lymph nodes, but the technology is additionally suited to identifying impact damage in composites and faults in multi layer integrated circuits. It has also been mooted as a way of detecting low or no metal containing improvised explosive devices.
 
Author
Tom Shelley
 
 
Supporting Information
http://www.teraview.com
 
This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright 2012.
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
 
Your comments / feedback
Do you have any comments or feedback on this article? Please contact us by filling in the form below.
NameHide name
Your Email Address
Comments
Send
Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Terms and Conditions

To comment on news stories or blogs you need to complete our 60 second registration process. Once completed this then allows you to download any and all white papers, register for e-zines and access our detailed supplier directory for FREE.

If you are all ready a registered user then enter your e-mail address and login.

You will need to have logged in prior to entering your comments in the boxes provided.

Please enter your email address to login and gain free access to this site.
 
If you are using this site for the first time registration is quick and completely free.
 
Register Now - Register Now


Email Address :  

Remember Me: - If this box is ticked you will be automatically logged in when you return.

Important: To protect your privacy, do not select 'Remember Me' if other users have access to the computer you are using.

View Privacy Policy
 
Related Companies
Teraview Ltd
 
 
Related News
Novel material could enable long term, controllable drug delivery
 
Novel device could power pacemakers by heartbeats alone
 
Elastic electronics pave way for bio-integrated medical devices
 
Breakthrough sensor measures glucose levels in saliva
 
Star Trek Tricorder a reality? T-rays may hold the answer
 
 
Related Technology
LED glasses assist visually impaired
 
Blue lasers like it hot
 
EPS shows potential
 
Medical vision systems save lives
 
Micrometrology of difficult surfaces
 
 
Related Events
MEDTEC UK 2012
 
 
Related Technology Spotlight
Better by design: Introducing the Engineering Design Show 2012
 
 
Related Blogs
Are you hiding your light?
 
 
Related Whitepapers
Thermal imaging, an indispensable technology for medical devices