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Telemedicine Peter Corr University of Natal S Africa • Overview • Lecture • Links Peter Corr • I am a professor of radiology working in South Africa. I have been involved with telemedicine projects in Africa for the last five years • What excites me about telemedicine is its potential impact in providing diagnosis and consultation in developing countries Overview • • • • • • • History Goals Definitions Applications Hardware &software requirements Pitfalls Future directions History of Telemedicine • First used in the sixties to transmit chest radiographs from Boston airport to Massachusetts General Hospital radiologists for reporting Definitions • Digitise- process to convert analogue data (continuous) into digital data (discrete) • Bit-smallest piece of digital information • Byte- a group of 8 bits used to represent a value or character • Baud- number of bits transmitted in 1 second Definitions • Lossless compression- no alteration of original image after reconstruction • DICOM- a standard for interconnecting digital imaging devices • telemedicine- the electronic transmission of medical images from one site to another for interpretation and consultation Goals of Telemedicine • To provide consultation and interpretation in regions of demonstrated need • To provide specialist services in hospitals without on site support • To promote educational opportunities for physicians Applications • • • • • • radiology ultrasound surgery opthalmology pathology dermatology Radiology Applications • • • • • • Plain radiographs Computerised tomography (CT) Ultrasound Magnetic resonance (MR) Angiograms Nuclear medicine Advantages • Specialist advice without the patient having to travel to the central hospital • Cost saving in transport and patient accommodation • Better utilisation of specialist resources • Educational opportunities Disadvantages • • • • • Incorrect diagnoses Cost of hardware Need good telecommunication network Training of staff Medicolegal concerns- patient confidentiality Image Acquisition • Digitiser to transfer hardcopy images into digital images • requires resolution of 2kX2kX12bits resolution • Nedd to compress data to reduce transmission time Image Transmission • Telephone lines are very slow but inexpensive at 64 kilobytes per second (baud) • ISDN telephone lines- intergrated service digital network is faster 256kb • ATM- asynchronous transfer mode >1Mb • Satellite- very fasy but expensive Image Display • High quality resolution monitors essential for reading images • resolution of 2kX2kX12bit required • Good screen luminance Applications- Ultrasound • Ultrasound-image files are small <100kb and static images are easy to transmit • Fetal ultrasound teleconsultation shows promise Applications- CT/MR Imaging • CT and MR imaging are small files <100kb and are easily transmitted for consultation Applications • Surgery- used for transmitting angiograms to vascular surgeons for consultation • Opthalmology- slit lamp and retinal images transmitted to opthalmologist using a retinal camera Pathology • Histology slides can be transmitted to pathologists using a digital camera attached to a microscope Hardware & Software • Standards- American College of Radiology Pitfalls • Cost- digitizers are expensive • Telecommunications limited in many parts of Africa and Asia- satellite shows promise • Medicolegal issues- patient confidentiality • Training of physicians Future Directions • Digital cameras may replace digitizers and are much cheaper • Wireless communications are rapidly expanding in developing countries • Internet II may provide sufficient bandwidth for telemedicine • Offers many educational opportunities Links • American College of Radiology • University of Iowa Health Web • Radiological Society of North America