TeraRecon Showcases SCCT-Compliant Aquarius iNtuition 4.4 at ACC 2009
| Source: TeraRecon, Inc.
SAN MATEO, CA--(Marketwire - March 29, 2009) - TeraRecon, Inc. (www.terarecon.com), a leader
in advanced visualization solutions for medical imaging, today announced
the cardiovascular CT interpretation and reporting capabilities of the
newly-released Aquarius iNtuition software version 4.4, which are compliant
with guidelines recently established by the Society for Cardiac Computed
Tomography ("SCCT"). The new software's capabilities will be demonstrated
at the 58th Annual Scientific Session of the American College of Cardiology
("ACC") in Orlando from March 29 - 31, 2009.
At ACC 2009, tens of thousands of professionals from the global cardiology
community will meet to present and discuss new innovations in cardiac care,
including the growing incorporation of computed tomography ("CT") imaging
into cardiac diagnosis and treatment protocols. CT technology has evolved
over recent years to make possible a wide range of new imaging procedures
that offer a less-invasive and often more economical alternative to
conventional diagnostic techniques such as catheter angiography, and the
SCCT is focused on issues related to such application of CT technology to
cardiac imaging.
The SCCT guidelines are established in an article currently in press to be
published in the March/April 2009 edition of the Journal of Cardiovascular
Computed Tomography(1). In the article, the authors outline requirements
for interpreting and reporting coronary computed tomography angiography
(CCTA), all of which are supported by TeraRecon's newly-available Aquarius
iNtuition 4.4 software.
Jeff Sorenson, TeraRecon vice president of sales and marketing, USA and
Canada, said: "In fact, Aquarius iNtuition 4.4 far exceeds the
interpretation requirements established by SCCT and addresses many other
important aspects of a truly efficient and effective interpretation
workflow for CCTA, which are not directly addressed by the SCCT
publication. Today's CT systems include 320-slice and 256-slice
technologies which can acquire truly massive datasets, while employing
complex strategies to control dose, which result in variations of image
quality across different phases of the cardiac cycle and other
considerations which must be effectively managed by the software."
Mr. Sorenson continued: "As was demonstrated at the recent advanced
visualization 'face-off' at the ECR meeting in Vienna, despite poor image
quality due to dose modulation, iNtuition was able to deliver a calculation
of left ventricular ejection fraction within 1% of the result obtained by
echo, while delivering a superior workflow efficiency and substantial time
savings vs competing software in an objective 'time and motion' study of
cardiac CT interpretation performed using the software(2)."
The iNtuition solution provides capabilities including advanced coronary
analysis with plaque assessment, 4D functional assessment, 4D valvular
analysis, EP planning, calcium scoring and a variety of other
cardiovascular tools including EVAR planning, all delivered through a
thin-client interface that can integrate smoothly with cardiology
information management systems and PACS.
iNtuition provides powerful decision support through automated
preprocessing that identifies and labels anatomy while automating various
segmentation and vascular analysis tasks upon scan completion so that the
examination is ready for immediate interpretation once opened by a
physician. iNtuition's "Workflow Template" concept allows interpretation
steps to be followed in a logical sequence, with the system presenting each
relevant view in turn, based on the anatomical landmarks established by the
automated software.
Timely and convenient distribution of results is made possible via a simple
web link to the AquariusWEB viewer, which provides interactive 3D image
review directly through a web browser or suitable PDA, such as the iPhone.
"The superiority of the iNtuition solution is derived from a long
experience developing Cardiac CT interpretation and management software,
dating back to 1997 when Cardiac CT was in its infancy, as well as the
company's unparalleled core technology advantage," said Robert Taylor, PhD,
TeraRecon president and chief operating officer. "Even today, as was
demonstrated less than one month ago in Vienna, TeraRecon is the only
company that can deliver a true Cardiac CT interpretation solution via a
thin client-server architecture, and with enough power in one of our
servers to simultaneously render over 100,000 CT images, only TeraRecon can
really provide a solution capable of managing modern Cardiac CT
requirements in a multi-user environment where datasets can approach 10,000
slices in size."
About TeraRecon, Inc. (www.terarecon.com)
TeraRecon Inc., a leader in advanced image processing and 3D visualization
techniques, provides advanced imaging systems for medical and other
visualization applications based on its unique and patented image
processing technologies. A four-time winner of Frost and Sullivan awards,
the company has developed a leading portfolio of products that advance the
performance, quality, functionality, and integration of image processing
and 3D visualization systems. Founded in 1997, TeraRecon has developed a
unique family of powerful processors that are used in its real-time,
enterprise-wide image processing solutions. TeraRecon is a privately held
company with headquarters in San Mateo, CA, European headquarters in
Frankfurt, Germany, and branch offices in Concord, MA; Tokyo, Japan and
Osaka, Japan.
(1) Gilbert L. Raff, MD*, Chair, Aiden Abidov, MD, PhD, Stephan Achenbach,
MD, Daniel S. Berman, MD, Lawrence M. Boxt, MD, Matthew J. Budoff, MD,
Victor Cheng, MD, Tony DeFrance, MD, Jeffrey C. Hellinger, MD, Ronald P.
Karlsberg, MD. "SCCT guidelines for the interpretation and reporting of
coronary computed tomographic angiography"
* Corresponding author. E-mail address: GRaff@beaumont.edu, Submitted
January 22, 2009. Accepted for publication January 23, 2009, retrieved
March 12, 2009 from http://www.scct.org/news/SCCTGuidelines.pdf
(2) The abstract for this presentation may be accessed on-line via the web
site www.myesr.org, under ECR 2009 Scientific Sessions number SS-203,
presentation B-129, or by following this link: http://tinyurl.com/b8qnb3