GREY:ZMSPF - Post by User
Post by
2guyson Sep 08, 2013 1:17pm
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Post# 21725710
Sept. 5, 2013 - Hamamatsu Develops Next-Generation PET Diagnostic System for Investigating Brain Disorders...
Sept. 5, 2013 - Hamamatsu Develops Next-Generation PET Diagnostic System for Investigating Brain Disorders...This was announced just 5 weeks after Hamamtsu gave Zecotek an initial $500k order of ZMS's patented
Lutetium Fine Silicate (LFS) scintillation crystals for use in third party positron emission tomography (PET) medical scanning devices.
So whose chrystals will Hamamatsu be using in this Next-Generation PET for investigating brain disorders?
Looks like they are currently using LYSO scintillator blocks produced by Kinheng-Crystal, but I wonder if ZMS's crystals will be tested as well? One thing for sure is, Hamamatsu is a very large company with a huge customer base.
https://www.hamamatsu.com/us/en/news/development/20130905000001.html
Hamamatsu develops next-generation PET diagnostic system for investigating brain disorders
Hamamatsu, Japan – September 5, 2013 – Hamamatsu Photonics K.K. has announced the successful collaboration with researchers from the Hamamatsu University School of Medicine to develop a next-generation PET diagnostic system for investigating Alzheimer’s disease and other brain disorders. The new system is expected to help physicians determine the correct treatment of various brain disorders, which has become an urgent issue in Japan due to the rising numbers among its aging population of patients with cognitive disorders, bipolar disorder, and Alzheimer’s disease.
The new PET diagnostic system is the world’s first combination of a newly-developed tracer that reflects changes in acetylcholine-related cognitive functions and a new high-precision brain PET scanner that can correct the movement of a patient’s head. This combination is designed to overcome the limitations of current systems in measuring the brain physiology of severely impaired patients, due to the current requirement for patients to stay still for a long time during scanning. Today, little is known about the pathophysiological states in the brains of severely affected patients in vivo. The new system will help clinical researchers see new details, and thus contribute not only to the selection of appropriate treatment for individual patients regardless of their severities, but also to the future development of new drugs and new treatments for various neurological and psychiatric disorders.
1.Newly-developed brain PET scanner which uses DOI(Depth-of-Interaction) detectors composed of Hamamatsu MPPC photodetectors and LYSO scintillator blocks segmented with a laser.
2.Newly-developed PET tracer, which binds to nicotinic receptors as shown in the brain images below.
3.Brain images of an Alzheimer’s patient depicted with the new PET system (world’s first PET images based on alpha-7 nicotinic receptors).