Issue StoriesA Study in Contrastsby Nici Lewis Patient comfort, image quality, and timing have driven advancements in contrast injectors and agents.
Structural imaging, specifically in the areas of CT, MRI, and ultrasound, is an evolving field, with the amount of time required to obtain an image, the image quality, and patient comfort acting as the driving forces behind the technological advancements. The use of contrast agents and injectors has played a major role in the progression of quality, timing, and care. Dr Dennis Foley is professor of radiology at the Medical College of Wisconsin (Milwaukee). He says, Vessels must have sufficient concentrations of contrast agent to be in the X-ray, and the sufficient amount of contrast must be delivered at a sufficient rate. Contrast injector manufacturers have concentrated on developing easy-to-use injectors that deliver contrast at sufficient rates while allowing for additional timing and safety capabilities, such as saline flush, saline test inject, and extravasation detection. A variety of companies manufacture a range of contrast injectors suited for specific CT, MRI, or ultrasound techniques, with varying capabilities and features. Contrast agent manufacturers also have focused on developing products that are matched to specific techniques and target areas, while reducing patients potential pain and burning sensations. Injection Lesson According to the company, CMS is a variable-rate injection system that offers the physician complete control of the rate and volume of contrast delivered to the patient through the use of a single sterile hand piece. Contrast waste reduction is also a focus for Acist in that a disposable syringe can be used with the Voyager for as many as five cases. E-Z-EM Inc (Westbury, NY) is a one modalityoriented company that manufactures contrast injectors for CT applications. According to Phil Waldstein, global product manager for E-Z-EM, the company has focused on the CT market for the manufacturing of equipment and parts, the servicing of equipment, and even co-marketing the Ultravist CT contrast agent with Berlex Laboratories. E-Z-EM recently released a double-barrel contrast injector, the EmpowerCTA, in addition to the single-barrel EmpowerCT. According to E-Z-EM, the EmpowerCTA offers all of the same features and benefits of the EmpowerCTincluding being small, lightweight, and flexible with a tilt sensor; the capability of arming at the injector; preloaded syringe options; and a syringe warmer option. However, the new double-barrel CT injector is geared toward todays advanced CT procedures that require the use of a saline chase.
Waldstein explains that this double-barrel saline flush system pushes a column of saline after the contrast to keep the contrast bolus nice and tight and going at the right speed. The system creates an even distribution of contrast while reducing the amount of contrast load. Additionally, E-Z-EM offers detection capabilities with its injector, the patented Extravasation Detection Accessory (EDA). The EDA pauses the injector and allows the technician to get to the patient before a serious extravasation can occur, Waldstein says. As technology advances and flow rates increase, the potential of a forcing out does not increase, but the increased flow rate could have an effect on the seriousness of the extravasation. The company claims that after a 10-second injection at 2.0 mL/sec, a 20 mL extravasation resultsreferred to as clinically significant, but not yet serious. After a 10-second injection at 10 mL/sec, 100 mL of contrastas large as a billiard ballwould be extravasated.
Medrad Inc (Indianola, Pa) manufactures contrast injection systems for several applications, including angiography, CT, MR, and ultrasound. In the CT application, Medrad offers two contrast injectors: the Stellant Sx single-syringe system and the Stellant D dual-syringe system, the latter of which is for more advanced CT applications. According to Terry Heagy, clinical specialist for CT products at Medrad, the added saline injector in the Stellant D dual-injector system provides a tighter bolus and reduced contrast volume. Also, the system allows for the ability to test the injection site with saline prior to the injection of contrast to ensure the patency of the vein. The Stellant user interface provides a color touch screen to display injector system operationssuch as a pressure monitor graph, which shows the pressure being developed in the syringe during an injection, and the Flow Profile, which provides a real-time graphic display of the entire injection profile. Dr David Dowe of Atlantic Medical Imaging (Somers Point, NJ) uses the Stellant D injection system. Specializing in coronary CT exams, Dowe says, The Stellant user interface is easy, reliable, pretty, and the technologists like it. The benefit of the dual injector, he adds, is the reduction of contrast to the patient and the reduction of cost. Medrads Spectris Solaris MR injection system was launched last year as the second generation to the Spectris. Bonnie Cowan, product manager of MR injector systems at Medrad, says that the Spectris Solaris was designed based on user feedback, which suggested feature additions for saving space, flexibility, and increased saline amounts. Compared to five in the first generation unit, only two main components now comprise the Spectris Solaris: the injector head and stand, which are located in the procedure room and are connected via fiber-optic cables to the display control unit located outside the room. The battery charger is now remote and independent from the display control unit, making the charger concealable. Customers asked for more saline, Cowan says, so Medrad increased the size of the saline syringe from 65 mL to 115 mL for KVO [keeping the vein open] and saline flush procedures. Also, she explains, many efforts were placed in software enhancements for the Spectris Solaris. The system offers a color touch screen, graphical depiction of syringes, and independent functioning of KVO from the injection profile. The six user-defined injection-control phases, along with the Medrad-patented Hold & Pause programming function, allow for test injections without the need to arm and disarm the injector. This functionality helps with throughput and speed of procedures, Cowan adds.
Secret Agents According to Steven Dowdell, director of marketing services for Amersham Health, Omnipaquewith 36 indications and five concentrationsis the gold standard in nonionic contrast agents. Now available in a new polymer bottle that is lighter, smaller, and safer than standard glass bottles, it includes a twist-off cap, peel-off tracking labels, and a latex-free bulls-eye stopper plus a pull ring (both for easy access). The polymer bottle can be accessed with a syringe, a power injector syringe, and an IV set.
Visipaque, also for X-ray applications and available in the new polymer bottle, is one of the only isosmolar contrast media available in the United States. Dowdell explains that Visipaque is good for use with compromised patients. And according to the company, the agent has an osmolality equal to that of blood, was designed for patient safety and comfort, and is well tolerated in the kidneys. Amershams nonionic contrast agent for MRI, Omniscan, is high dose and high speed, Dowdell says. It has no maximum volume limit, is indicated for standard and triple-dose procedures, and offers rapid bolus injection. Omniscan is available in prefilled syringes, glass vials, and a SafePak needle-free delivery system. Finally, Optison is Amershams contrast agent for ultrasound imaging of the heart. It is indicated for use in patients with suboptimal echocardiograms to opacify the left ventricle and to improve the delineation of the left ventricular endocardial borders. Says Dowdell, Amershams support staff features doctors on hand to answer callers questions, and the company funds many studies.
Berlex Laboratories (Montville, NJ) manufactures an array of imaging agents, including Feridex IV, Magnevist, and Ultravist. Feridex IV is a paramagnetic, iron oxide, liver-specific MR agent that was the first organ-specific MRI contrast available in the United States for detecting and evaluating liver lesions. Magnevist was the worlds first, and is one of the most widely used, MR contrast agents, explains Serge Wurman, director of business development for Berlex Labora-tories imaging division. And finally, Ultravist is a nonionic, iodinated contrast agent for use in CT, including applications in head and body CT, excretory urography, coronary arteriography, left ventriculography, and cerebral arteriography.
Mallinckrodt (St Louis) is a business unit of Tyco Healthcare that manufactures both contrast media and injectors for multiple applications. Two of the agents are Optiray and OptiMark. Optiray is an injectable, low-osmolar, nonionic contrast media agent thats used primarily in X-ray applications. Optiray is available in an array of iodine concentrations as well as in Mallinckrodts Ultraject prefilled syringes. On the other hand, OptiMark is a gadolinium-based, IV contrast media for MR imaging of the brain, spine, and liver. Additionally, Sales Director Matt Hewig explains that Mallinckrodt is the only company to have FDA clearance to inject its own manufactured agent (OptiMark) with its own manufactured injector (Optistar). Plus, Optistar is a dual-injector system for both contrast and saline.
Nici Lewis is a contributing writer for Medical Imaging. |
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