News

GE Healthcare has introduced a new data acquisition technology designed to improve patient comfort by largely eliminating the horrible noise generated during an MRI scan. Conventional MRI scanners ...
Aside from being cramped and claustrophobic, MRI scanners can get LOUD. Case in point, listen to this: GE Healthcare says they’re ushering in a future full of silent MRIs with Silent Scan ...
GE HealthCare unveiled its Signa Sprint MRI scanner Monday for cardiology and oncology imaging. This 1.5 telsa scanner is pending Food and Drug Administration clearance, but once approved it will ...
During that time, the system will be assessed and compared with standard MRI scanners already in use. As the GE statement notes, this collaboration illustrates an emerging trend of more ...
GE HealthCare ... MRI machine to help explore the brain’s structure and function. The company raised the curtain this week on its plans to offer a dedicated, head-only scanner, the Signa Magnus ...
"A smaller, lighter, dedicated head-only MRI system ... the scanner down in size (by about a third), weight, and cost so that smaller-community hospitals can both fit and afford them. GE says ...
GE HealthCare has announced the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) 510(k) clearance for its SIGNA MAGNUS magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner. The 3.0T high-performance, head-only scanner is ...
GE HealthCare on Wednesday said U.S. regulators had cleared its head-only magnetic resonance imaging scanner. The Chicago-based medical technology company said the MRI device, called Signa Magnus ...
GE Healthcare and Mayo Clinic have won a $5.7 million federal grant to develop a lower-cost, head-only MRI scanner that could handle 25-30 percent of MRI imaging needs, according to a report by DOTmed ...
SMIL Southwest Medical Imaging, LTD. (SMIL), unveiled its first GE ... MRI technology in Arizona, prioritizing patient comfort throughout the imaging process. The advanced wide-bore scanner ...
GE Healthcare’s Waukesha engineering team played a major role in developing the company’s new magnetic-resonance-imaging technology that reduces scan time by 30 percent to 50 percent.