Physician’s hand held device helps detect breast tumors
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Clinical Trials, Products
Sure Touch is a unique digital sensing device that assists a physician or other health care professional in screening for breast cancer during routine exams. It can increase the chance of early diagnosis of breast cancer.
During the breast exam the device is placed on the breast and an image is then reflected on a computer screen. It produces a visual map of the breast and if a mass is detected it can show its estimated size, shape, hardness, and location.
A clinical trial published in the American Journal of Surgery says that Sure Touch more accurately determines if there is a mass and if the mass is cancerous than manual palpation alone. The study included 110 women who reported a mass in her breast. These women underwent palpation, then testing with Sure Touch, which was followed by ultrasound and mammography. Sure Touch identified the masses 94 percent of the time, while physician just feeling the breast identified masses 86 percent of the time.
Its always nice to hear about another tool that can be used to detect breast cancer! I hope physicians are taking advantage of this new technology.
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Original post by Kristina Collins
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Physician’s hand held device helps detect breast tumors
Filed under: Breast Cancer, Clinical Trials, Products
Sure Touch is a unique digital sensing device that assists a physician or other health care professional in screening for breast cancer during routine exams. It can increase the chance of early diagnosis of breast cancer.
During the breast exam the device is placed on the breast and an image is then reflected on a computer screen. It produces a visual map of the breast and if a mass is detected it can show its estimated size, shape, hardness, and location.
A clinical trial published in the American Journal of Surgery says that Sure Touch more accurately determines if there is a mass and if the mass is cancerous than manual palpation alone. The study included 110 women who reported a mass in her breast. These women underwent palpation, then testing with Sure Touch, which was followed by ultrasound and mammography. Sure Touch identified the masses 94 percent of the time, while physician just feeling the breast identified masses 86 percent of the time.
Its always nice to hear about another tool that can be used to detect breast cancer! I hope physicians are taking advantage of this new technology.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
Original post by Kristina Collins
No comments yet. Be the first.
Leave a reply






