WAUKESHA, Wis. -- Imagine this: Joseph Smith is just a few minutes old, and his family can't wait to meet him � but first he has an appointment with a heart surgeon. During his mother's pregnancy, doctors using a new medical imaging technology from GE Healthcare (NYSE: GE) found a defect in Joseph's heart that if not repaired could cause a serious condition, or even death, during infancy.
An immediate and successful surgery will mean Joseph will have the opportunity to live a long and healthy life. The technology that is helping doctors find fetal heart defects is GE�s Voluson 730 ultrasound system. It lets doctors look at multi-dimensional images of a fetus� heart. By identifying heart defects in the early stages of a woman�s pregnancy, doctors can recommend proper care to give the baby the best possible chance of survival.
Joseph isn't a real child, but his story is all too common: as many as one in every 250 babies are born with heart defects, according to Greggory R. DeVore, M.D., director of the Fetal Diagnostic Centers in Pasadena, Calif.
"Congenital heart defects are the most common of all birth defects, and they are a major cause of infant death," DeVore said. "This is because newborns' heart defects are often not identified before birth. Mother and child are sent home with no suspicion of a problem, and only when the baby becomes ill does the problem come to light. Emergency surgery is then often required to save the child's life."
GE�s Voluson 730 ultrasound system can change that scenario. The system uses an advanced technique called Spatial Temporal Image Correlation (STIC) to gather a volume of data that allows clinicians to create detailed three-dimensional images of the heart that can be viewed in the fourth-dimension: real-time motion. These images allow doctors to visualize an entire fetal heart cycle from start to finish, including the workings of the heart chambers, the fluttering of the heart valves, and the flow of blood in the heart and its vessels.
"4D ultrasound with STIC is improving our ability to discover heart defects in utero," DeVore said. "This technology allows clinicians who do not specialize in heart care to see more detail and more easily evaluate the anatomy, which may improve our overall detection rate of heart defects before birth.�
For many years, ultrasound, which creates clinical images using high-frequency sound waves, has been a safe and effective way to assess the health of a fetus. However, a fetal heart has been one of the most difficult organs to image because of its size and constant motion. At the 14th week of pregnancy, for example, the fetal heart is about the size of half a pea, and it beats approximately 160 times per minute, more than twice as fast as an adult's heart. In addition, a fetus moves unpredictably - scanning the heart is like aiming at a moving target.
The Voluson 730 ultrasound system enables clinicians to make a real-time assessment of the fetal heart during the exam, and/or save the data for future assessment. With GE�s STIC technology, clinicians can use the ultrasound images to navigate through the heart, view images from different angles and run the images at actual speed, or in slow-motion, to evaluate the vessels and blood flow.
Usually, 4D fetal heart ultrasound exams are performed on high-risk patients or if a traditional prenatal ultrasound study, or some other information, indicates a possible heart condition. If the 4D ultrasound STIC exam indicates a condition, doctors can advise the mother on changes in prenatal behavior that may reduce risk to the fetus, and create a treatment plan to correct the problem after birth.
According to Terri Bresenham, vice president of GE�s Global Diagnostic Ultrasound business, STIC technology is one of the several clinical advancements in 4D ultrasound. �Since the Voluson 730's introduction in 2001, it has become the industry�s leading 4D ultrasound system. The demand from the medical community has surpassed our initial expectations � driven by its ability to deliver new clinical utility in the areas of gynecology, infertility treatment monitoring, and a broad range of fetal conditions.�
Today, there are more than 1,300 Voluson 730 ultrasound systems in use in United States, and GE expects to ship about 300 more by year's end. GE is the world�s leading ultrasound technology provider. Worldwide, GE�s full line of ultrasound systems are used to perform approximately 30 million patient exams annually.
About GE Healthcare
GE Healthcare provides transformational medical technologies that will shape a new age of patient care. GE Healthcare�s expertise in medical imaging and information technologies, medical diagnostics, patient monitoring systems, disease research, drug discovery and biopharmaceuticals is dedicated to detecting disease earlier and tailoring treatment for individual patients. GE Healthcare offers a broad range of services to improve productivity in healthcare and enable healthcare providers to better diagnose, treat and manage patients with conditions such as cancer, Alzheimer�s and cardiovascular diseases.
GE Healthcare is a $14 billion unit of General Electric Company (NYSE: GE) that is headquartered in the United Kingdom. Worldwide, GE Healthcare employs more than 42,500 people committed to serving healthcare professionals and their patients in more than 100 countries. For more information about GE Healthcare, visit our website at www.gehealthcare.com.
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