Danville Regional Health System Our Services
About DHRS Health Information Our Services Patient & Visitor Info Physician Directory News & Events Medical Staff & Associates Careers
Blood Donor Center
Cancer Care
Clinical Research
Drugs & Medications
Emergency Services
Family Care
Heart Center of
the Piedmont
Home Healthcare Services
Laboratory Services
Occupational Medicine
Outpatient Services
Pain Management
Psychiatry & Behavioral Health
Rehabilitation Services
Seniors
Surgical Services
Women's & Children's
X-Ray & Imaging
   

MRI

MRI
PET
Mammography
Danville Diagnostic Imaging Center
Children's Healthcare Center
Family Healthcare Centers
Health Information
Radiologic Technology Program

New $1.5 million MRI Imaging Machine

The Danville Regional Medical Center has purchased a new $1.5 million magnetic resonance imaging machine that could hold the key to the future of open heart surgeries at the facility.


Work crews moved the machine into the hospital through a removable cap in the roof.

The hospital already had a MRI machine, but it was in the wall and closed at the end.

Patients suffered severe claustrophobic bouts that required the hospital to send some of its patients to the nearby outpatient center.

DRMC graphicThere, they had an open MRI machine that was more comfortable to the patients but lacks the level of quality necessary for detection of organ and blood vessel problems.

“The biggest question everybody asks us is, “Why didn’t we get an open magnet?” Computed Tomography and MRI coordinator Sandra Bayes said. “The answer is simple; the closed magnet gives better images."

An open MRI operates something like a tanning bed, while the new Siemens 1.5 Tesla symphony has a donut-shaped magnet that scans over the body.

The older version that the hospital is replacing had a hard bed that slid on a track into a wall and was completely enclosed.

“Claustrophobia was the biggest problem, “Bayes said.

The new unit will allow heavier patients to be scanned as well.

The potential of the new machine, in conjunction with operations at the hospital’s Heart Center of the Piedmont, is exciting to Bayes and Johnson.

Johnson said he looks forward to a day when they can observe a heart beating through imaging.

Bayes also keeps an eye to the past, bidding the 6 year old unit a good riddance.

It's already gone,” she said.

“They sent it back to Siemens, and Siemens will probably send it to some Third World country,” Johnson said.

To install the unit, a 12-man team that exclusively installs the units for Siemens used a crane to lower the machine through a hole in the roof.

“We had a hole in the roof,” Johnson said. “When we built the building, we had a removable cap.”

To protect from too much sunlight, a filtering system keeps the ultraviolet light from flooding the room.

“The skylight is good for the atmosphere of the room,” Bayes said. “It opened it up and put a whole lot more light in there.”

 

(434)-799-2100
Copyright 2004 Danville Regional Health System, Danville, VA. All Rights Reserved.
Please read our disclaimer and privacy policy.