New technology to detect cancer

Dr Soodamani Ramalingam and her team at the University are developing 3-D object recognition and image processing so that it will be possible to get a more accurate picture of human tumours so that cancers can be identified and treated accordingly.

They plan to make this exciting technology available within three years to hospitals throughout the UK and seek collaborators and further funding to make this happen.

In collaboration with the Paul Strickland Scanner Centre where clinical image data is acquired, the team is using a combination of Fuzzy Logic (a type of logic that recognizes more than simple true and false values) and Image Processing to identify cancer and establish accurately how far it has spread.

“This new method of image analysis imaging will be more accurate in defining tumour edges, and will potentially allow more effective treatments,” said Dr Ramalingam.

According to the researchers, the technology, which will also have applications in other medical fields, will compliment traditional Positive Emission Tomography (PET) and Computer Tomography (CT) scans because the fusion of Fuzzy Logic and Image Processing will produce better defined tumour images and so greater certainty in diagnosis and treatment.

“The classical mathematical approaches to looking at clinical scans do not always produce high resolution images,” said Dr Ramalingam. “In some cases this means that specialists cannot interpret the PET/CT scan very easily, so there is always a certain degree of uncertainty that our advanced analysis techniques will address.”

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Helene Murphy alfa

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http://www.herts.ac.uk

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The development of medical equipment, products and technical procedures is characterized by high research and development costs in a variety of fields related to the study of human medicine.

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