X-Message-Number: 18715
From: "Peter Christiansen" <>
Subject: Current issue DISCOVER Magazine
Date: Thu, 07 Mar 2002 16:20:47 -0600

R&D
News of science, medicine, and technology

I'm Looking Through You
by Solana Pyne


Soon doctors may get a more penetrating look at their patients.

Photograph courtesy of George Stetten/The Robotics Institute, CMU
George Stetten, a bioengineer at the University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie 
Mellon University, has created a portable ultrasound device that can be 
pointed at any part of the body to reveal what's going on under the skin. 
Like conventional ultrasound machines, the sonic flashlight constructs an 
image of internal anatomy by beaming high-frequency sound waves at the body 
and mapping how the waves bounce back. But Stetten found a way to dispense 
with the cumbersome computer displays. His wandlike device reflects the 
three-dimensional ultrasound image off a thin, translucent mirror, as shown 
above, and could be especially useful for helping doctors perform precise 
biopsies. Stetten, a former medical student, envisions a pocket-size sonic 
flashlight to make it easier for doctors to draw blood or master difficult 
injections. "I was always interested in finding a better way to stick 
needles in people," Stetten says.








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RELATED WEB SITES:
I'm Looking Through You." George Stetten's site: 
www.stetten.com/george/rttr. Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute site: 
www.ri.cmu.edu.



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