WEBVTT 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:15.640 Music 00:00:18.160 --> 00:00:24.940 Herald Angel: And now we come to the talk entitled low-cost non-invasive biomedical 00:00:24.940 --> 00:00:32.000 imaging. Current medical imaging has problems: it is expensive, it is large, 00:00:32.000 --> 00:00:39.940 rarely preventively used and maybe you've heard of the story of a fMRI - this is the 00:00:39.940 --> 00:00:45.960 magnet resonance tomography - they put in a dead Salmon and they can get a signal 00:00:45.960 --> 00:00:51.729 from brain activity from it. There's also lots of problems in the software as well. 00:00:51.729 --> 00:00:59.450 A little story, maybe you look it up. And how this whole mess can be solved with the 00:00:59.450 --> 00:01:06.769 technique called Open Electrical Impedance Tomography - this will tell us Jean 00:01:06.769 --> 00:01:10.509 Rintoul. Give a big round of applause for Jean. 00:01:10.509 --> 00:01:18.541 applause Jean Rintoul: Thank you. 00:01:18.541 --> 00:01:20.939 Hello everyone. Today I 00:01:20.939 --> 00:01:28.159 will be talking about an open source route for biomedical imaging using a technique 00:01:28.159 --> 00:01:34.090 that's in R&D called Electrical Impedance Tomography. Not many people have heard of 00:01:34.090 --> 00:01:42.609 it, which is why it seems like it's important to mention. First of all, I'll 00:01:42.609 --> 00:01:48.789 just give you the vision of what it would be like if everybody had access to cheap 00:01:48.789 --> 00:01:56.210 biomedical imaging. Right now you only get imaged when something's gone wrong. And, 00:01:56.210 --> 00:02:02.189 moreover, you only actually get to use these tools when something has gone wrong 00:02:02.189 --> 00:02:08.780 in a first world country when you're lucky enough to be close to a hospital and have 00:02:08.780 --> 00:02:15.030 access to these technologies. That's a very limited number of people. What's even 00:02:15.030 --> 00:02:20.720 worse about it: is it's hard to hack! So, if you wanted to improve this technology 00:02:20.720 --> 00:02:28.260 yourself - medical physics is an amazing field - but it would be very hard to do so 00:02:28.260 --> 00:02:34.510 because you don't have a three million dollar MRI scanner sitting in your garage. 00:02:34.510 --> 00:02:40.360 Maybe you do, that's good for you, just not many of us do. If we did have cheap 00:02:40.360 --> 00:02:46.190 biomedical imaging we could do things like do preventive scans so you would wake up 00:02:46.190 --> 00:02:51.520 in the morning you'd like, take a shower, the device would be quietly imaging your 00:02:51.520 --> 00:02:55.750 body, would warn you if the slightest little thing when went wrong. You'd do 00:02:55.750 --> 00:03:02.290 machine learning over it, it'd be wonderful wonderful for health care. So, 00:03:02.290 --> 00:03:07.750 that's the vision of what biomedical imaging could be. And the other point is 00:03:07.750 --> 00:03:13.310 sometimes we move forward faster when we share the information. I worked in defense 00:03:13.310 --> 00:03:16.410 for a brief period and people didn't really share information between each 00:03:16.410 --> 00:03:21.440 other, and I think that inhibited science from moving forward. So, sharing is 00:03:21.440 --> 00:03:24.760 caring. So today I'm going to go through a few 00:03:24.760 --> 00:03:28.020 different things. I'm going to go through the current biomedical imaging 00:03:28.020 --> 00:03:31.020 technologies. I'll give you an introduction to Electrical Impedance 00:03:31.020 --> 00:03:35.590 Tomography. I'll go through the open source Electrical Impedance Tomography 00:03:35.590 --> 00:03:40.660 Project. Then I'll go through some applications that we could apply it to. 00:03:40.660 --> 00:03:45.040 And then I'll suggest a few different next steps that we can go into because by no 00:03:45.040 --> 00:03:52.980 means is it finished. Right now we have four different main existing imaging 00:03:52.980 --> 00:04:00.910 modalities. Your MRI scanner, which is a wonderful tool, it's huge, very expensive. 00:04:00.910 --> 00:04:06.320 The most commonly used imaging is actually CAT scanner which sends our x-rays through 00:04:06.320 --> 00:04:11.070 your body which is ionizing radiation, which is bad for you because it causes 00:04:11.070 --> 00:04:17.220 cancer in the long run if you get too many of those scans and it's actually the first 00:04:17.220 --> 00:04:21.460 first scan that you'll get when you go into the emergency room. It's the most 00:04:21.460 --> 00:04:24.650 commonly used. And as we all know we've got those grainy images that come from the 00:04:24.650 --> 00:04:32.400 ultrasound of fetuses, wonderful tool except for the scattering due to the sound 00:04:32.400 --> 00:04:36.299 gets scattered when you have different density materials next to each other. And 00:04:36.299 --> 00:04:45.160 not exactly an imaging modality but a very important diagnostic technique is EEG. 00:04:45.160 --> 00:04:50.980 So you might ask, how do we classify these right now? we have 3 main types of 00:04:50.980 --> 00:04:58.850 resolution. Spatial, contrast, and time. Spatial resolution is, basically, what 00:04:58.850 --> 00:05:04.010 space you can determine 2 different objects from each other. Contrast 00:05:04.010 --> 00:05:09.000 resolution is soft tissue or subtle differences in tissues. And time 00:05:09.000 --> 00:05:13.540 resolution, as it sounds, is how things change over time and how quickly you can 00:05:13.540 --> 00:05:19.400 do these images together. Your CAT scan, your basic machine in a hospital, 00:05:19.400 --> 00:05:24.210 costs 1 to 2.5 million dollars. You probably didn't get one for Christmas 00:05:24.210 --> 00:05:30.020 to play around with. Oh well. It's also got this ionizing radiation, you've got 00:05:30.020 --> 00:05:32.710 a lot of maintenance, and dedicated technicians. 00:05:32.710 --> 00:05:35.240 An MRI, say, your average 3 Tesla magnet 00:05:35.240 --> 00:05:41.060 with its own helium quenching chamber no less, as well as dedicated technicians 00:05:41.060 --> 00:05:50.710 and experts who can actually read the images. Again $3,000,000. An amazing 00:05:50.710 --> 00:05:55.950 and beautiful technology, but really expensive. Amazing spatial resolution, the 00:05:55.950 --> 00:06:01.010 best. When it does something at this very high spatial resolution, it actually takes 00:06:01.010 --> 00:06:06.490 4 minutes and 16 seconds. Which is a really long time to take to do this 00:06:06.490 --> 00:06:11.200 wonderful spatial resolution image. Ultrasound, it's a bit grainy due to 00:06:11.200 --> 00:06:18.560 scattering. On average it costs about 1$115k, not too bad. It's a pretty minimal 00:06:18.560 --> 00:06:25.460 health risk. EEG. EEG doesn't do any image reconstruction. In fact it does very 00:06:25.460 --> 00:06:33.040 little in many ways. But it is still very useful. Your average medical grade by EEG 00:06:33.040 --> 00:06:37.920 system is $40k. You might also know of some open source EEG projects which are 00:06:37.920 --> 00:06:45.070 pretty cool. So just a note on the radiation of CAT-scans. It's actually the 00:06:45.070 --> 00:06:53.700 biggest contributing cause of radiation in the United States. So here I just put 00:06:53.700 --> 00:06:58.550 those biomedical imaging modalities onto a graph so that you can kind of think of 00:06:58.550 --> 00:07:03.120 them in terms of spatial resolution and time resolution, and where they fall in 00:07:03.120 --> 00:07:09.240 the picture of common things that go wrong with people. Like, X-rays or CAT scans are 00:07:09.240 --> 00:07:15.430 great for for looking at bone and bone breaks; pulmonary edema, that's water on 00:07:15.430 --> 00:07:20.760 the lung ,tuberculosis, huge in third- world countries, massive problem. You 00:07:20.760 --> 00:07:25.380 don't actually need super high spatial resolution to be able to detect it. And 00:07:25.380 --> 00:07:29.610 it's important to sort of understand what you can do at different spatial and time 00:07:29.610 --> 00:07:35.430 resolutions. Under like, the optimal goal of all of this, I put non-invasive 00:07:35.430 --> 00:07:40.370 electrophysiology. What that is, is high spatial resolution and high time 00:07:40.370 --> 00:07:46.820 resolution. That's where you can measure ion activation, or basically what cells 00:07:46.820 --> 00:07:51.460 are doing when they communicate with each other, which is right now only done in an 00:07:51.460 --> 00:07:55.850 invasive manner. Today I'm gonna talk about this new 00:07:55.850 --> 00:08:00.870 technique called Electrical Impedance Tomography and describe where it will fit 00:08:00.870 --> 00:08:09.650 in amongst what already exists. So what is it. Okay yeah basically you send AC 00:08:09.650 --> 00:08:17.130 currents through the body, say a 50 kilohertz current. And that will take 00:08:17.130 --> 00:08:23.360 different routes based on what tissue there is. So it might go around some cells 00:08:23.360 --> 00:08:29.620 and straight through others. And that's really important because differentiating, 00:08:29.620 --> 00:08:34.869 say, fat from muscle is one thing that you could do. But you can go further and 00:08:34.869 --> 00:08:41.969 differentiate, say, tumors from healthy tissue. Because tumors have different 00:08:41.969 --> 00:08:47.960 impedance spectra to the healthy tissue. So as you can see, that would be very 00:08:47.960 --> 00:08:53.470 useful to do. This set up here is a called a phantom. What it is, it's like a 00:08:53.470 --> 00:08:58.650 simulated human body. You get some saltwater - the body is 80% water as you 00:08:58.650 --> 00:09:03.369 might know -you get some meat or vegetables. You put it inside and then you 00:09:03.369 --> 00:09:07.249 use that to image. So we have current flowing through all these different 00:09:07.249 --> 00:09:13.120 directions and we recreate an image. Right now it's used for lung volume 00:09:13.120 --> 00:09:18.399 measurements. This is a baby with an EIT setup. Muscle and fat mass, there's a 00:09:18.399 --> 00:09:22.180 paper on gestural recognition that just came out this year, you can look at 00:09:22.180 --> 00:09:27.260 bladder and stomach fullness. There's some research papers on breast and kidney 00:09:27.260 --> 00:09:33.860 cancer detection. There's another research paper on hemorrhage detection for stroke. 00:09:33.860 --> 00:09:39.110 You can also look at the ... there's more R&D on the depth of anesthesia in in 00:09:39.110 --> 00:09:42.820 surgery as well, which would be another interesting use for it. So all of these 00:09:42.820 --> 00:09:50.649 are sort of in the works and you might ask, "Great, that sounds amazing, why 00:09:50.649 --> 00:09:55.589 isn't everybody using it already?" Well yeah it's really an R&D technique right 00:09:55.589 --> 00:10:03.029 now and it has a big problem: its spatial resolution seems pretty limited. So it's 00:10:03.029 --> 00:10:06.990 limited by the number of electrodes. But I will discuss some potential ways to get 00:10:06.990 --> 00:10:12.929 around that. As we go, it might not ever get to the spatial resolution of MRI. 00:10:12.929 --> 00:10:16.740 But maybe we don't need it to to be useful. Because it's so compact. It's so 00:10:16.740 --> 00:10:23.810 cheap, nothing about it is expensive. It's got better source localization than EEG. 00:10:23.810 --> 00:10:27.759 It does not ionize, it's not harmful to human tissue. It's 00:10:27.759 --> 00:10:33.589 also got great time resolution, so it has advantages and disadvantages. I'll just 00:10:33.589 --> 00:10:39.240 remind you of what the first MRI scan looked like at this point in time. As you 00:10:39.240 --> 00:10:45.599 can see it looks pretty crappy in 1977. And now it looks pretty awesome. That's a 00:10:45.599 --> 00:10:51.230 slice of my head by the way in a 3 Tesla MRI scanner. This is what early EIT looks 00:10:51.230 --> 00:10:59.429 like. That's with 16 electrodes only. What will it look like in a few years time I 00:10:59.429 --> 00:11:06.899 don't know. I hope that MRI gives you a pathway that it will take take too. 00:11:06.899 --> 00:11:13.110 Now I'll introduce you to the OpenEIT project. The OpenEIT project is obviously 00:11:13.110 --> 00:11:20.449 open source. It has a PCB design done in Eagle CAD. It has firmware written in C. 00:11:20.449 --> 00:11:24.919 It has a Python dashboard that lets you see the reconstruction in real time. It 00:11:24.919 --> 00:11:29.300 also has a reconstruction algorithm which I'll go into. And you can get it from 00:11:29.300 --> 00:11:36.540 github right there. So how does it reconstruct an image? OpenEIT right now 00:11:36.540 --> 00:11:43.059 has 8 electrodes and what you do is, you send this 50 kHz current through every 00:11:43.059 --> 00:11:48.920 combination of those 8 electrodes and you get a different impedance value for each 00:11:48.920 --> 00:11:55.519 of those measurements. On the left you can see basically what you're doing. You know where the 00:11:55.519 --> 00:12:01.269 electrodes are positioned and you get one value going horizontally. You add it to 00:12:01.269 --> 00:12:06.099 another value coming from another direction. And again, you can sort of see 00:12:06.099 --> 00:12:11.240 it's getting a low resolution image as it goes around adding those values together. 00:12:11.240 --> 00:12:18.370 If you use many, many views you bring the image back. This is the radon transform, 00:12:18.370 --> 00:12:23.749 that's what it's called, and you basically just send lots of current 00:12:23.749 --> 00:12:26.900 through these different slightly different angles and you build up something called a 00:12:26.900 --> 00:12:33.580 sinogram which is over there. And then you invert it to get the image back. I used 00:12:33.580 --> 00:12:37.209 OpenCV which is a really common image processing library to do this. You can 00:12:37.209 --> 00:12:43.360 just do it with a regular image yourself and try it out. But what I did is exactly 00:12:43.360 --> 00:12:49.069 the same as what you do with a regular image, except I use current to be the 00:12:49.069 --> 00:12:57.810 input data. So this is the PCB design in Eagle. Basically it has a 00:12:57.810 --> 00:13:02.830 few different features. A connector for your 8 electrodes. It's running an ARM 00:13:02.830 --> 00:13:11.339 Cortex M3, which is quite nice. It has a dedicated DFT engine for doing your direct 00:13:11.339 --> 00:13:16.829 Fourier transform in real, time which is also quite nice. A JTAG debugger to easily 00:13:16.829 --> 00:13:22.619 reprogram it. It's got coin cell or external battery options. It has UART to 00:13:22.619 --> 00:13:28.660 get the serial data off. And you can also flip it to Bluetooth mode and get the data 00:13:28.660 --> 00:13:32.040 off by Bluetooth if you felt like going Wireless. 00:13:32.040 --> 00:13:37.131 At this point you might be asking "Is this safe for me to play around with?", which 00:13:37.131 --> 00:13:42.879 is a really great question because the answer is actually "Yeah! it is". There's 00:13:42.879 --> 00:13:51.050 some guidelines called the IEC60601-1 guidelines for safer use in humans. And 00:13:51.050 --> 00:13:56.949 basically which says it should be, and openEIT is less than 10 micro amps which 00:13:56.949 --> 00:14:02.959 is great because that's well within their guidelines. If you want to compare it to 00:14:02.959 --> 00:14:06.220 other things that are completely legal, say I don't know if you've seen there's 00:14:06.220 --> 00:14:10.629 like late-night TV ads for those abs stimulators that stimulate your muscles, 00:14:10.629 --> 00:14:17.269 there are about 15 to 20 milliamps just for reference and as a scale to look at 00:14:17.269 --> 00:14:23.749 the 10 micro amps. So some of you might have used them already and that's hugely 00:14:23.749 --> 00:14:27.890 more current than what we're putting through to image the body here. This is 00:14:27.890 --> 00:14:33.480 what the dashboard looks like. It does the reconstruction. You can connect to serial 00:14:33.480 --> 00:14:37.850 at baseline. You can obviously adjust sliders to look at the area that you want 00:14:37.850 --> 00:14:43.849 to look at. You can read from a file and fiddle around however you would like to. 00:14:43.849 --> 00:14:49.169 This is what it looks like when you reconstruct something. I have a phantom up 00:14:49.169 --> 00:14:54.079 there which is a part of water with a cup in it. I moved the cup around anti- 00:14:54.079 --> 00:14:58.900 clockwise so you can see in each of the pictures I move it around a little bit 00:14:58.900 --> 00:15:04.400 more. And you can see the reconstruction there with me moving the cup around again. 00:15:04.400 --> 00:15:07.969 This might not be wow-ing you with the resolution, with only 8 electrodes. It's a 00:15:07.969 --> 00:15:14.800 proof of concept but that's okay. Let's see if we can make this I make this go. 00:15:14.800 --> 00:15:20.720 Here's a real-time video demonstration of it. Here's me with a shot glass. I'm 00:15:20.720 --> 00:15:24.639 moving around anti-clockwise. Hopefully you can see on the left the image being 00:15:24.639 --> 00:15:33.920 reconstructed in real time. And there we go, move to the bottom. You can see it 00:15:33.920 --> 00:15:41.030 over there and again up to the top. you can see it over there. So that's a basic 00:15:41.030 --> 00:15:44.739 proof of principle version of it running. 00:15:49.129 --> 00:15:55.079 So the first MRI scan of human lungs wasn't that amazing. 00:15:55.079 --> 00:15:57.634 Early EIT scan wasn't either. 00:15:57.634 --> 00:16:02.824 applause Something else that you can use it 00:16:02.824 --> 00:16:08.590 that for is differentiating objects. Multi-frequency. This is what they're 00:16:08.590 --> 00:16:13.969 doing the breast cancer and kidney cancer scans on. Basically you send different 00:16:13.969 --> 00:16:17.920 frequencies through these times, called multi-frequency Electrical Impedance 00:16:17.920 --> 00:16:23.180 Tomography and you build up a spectrum. Here I've got an apple, a pear oh no a 00:16:23.180 --> 00:16:27.660 sweet potato and and some water. And I've sent through these different frequencies 00:16:27.660 --> 00:16:32.309 and I get these different spectrums. They're different, you can see that 00:16:32.309 --> 00:16:35.829 they're different. They're quite obviously different but yeah you can also just 00:16:35.829 --> 00:16:39.680 simply classify. And on the left you can see where the water is, the apple is, the 00:16:39.680 --> 00:16:44.769 sweet potato is. Or, the sweet potato and the apple a little bit harder that one. 00:16:44.769 --> 00:16:53.800 But that's basically what you do when you detect cancer. So that's what I did. But 00:16:53.800 --> 00:16:57.760 maybe we should look at the other papers and see what they did because they did 00:16:57.760 --> 00:17:04.589 better than me. So there's this guy called Aristovich, 2014 he published spatial and 00:17:04.589 --> 00:17:07.569 temporal resolution, and using this technique 200 micro meters less than 2 00:17:07.569 --> 00:17:14.230 milliseconds which covers most of the applications that I listed on that graph 00:17:14.230 --> 00:17:19.260 at the start of the talk. The downside here is that it was an intracranial array, 00:17:19.260 --> 00:17:24.190 so it was under the skull. So very dense electrodes, a lot more electrodes. I only 00:17:24.190 --> 00:17:32.089 used 8 he used like 256 so you can see that it can be, like, the potential is 00:17:32.089 --> 00:17:36.859 there. So how should we use it first? what's a 00:17:36.859 --> 00:17:41.230 nice low hanging through fruit? What about medical imaging in the developing world 00:17:41.230 --> 00:17:46.649 where I believe 4 billion people don't have access to medical imaging. No MRI, no 00:17:46.649 --> 00:17:51.519 CAT scans. Why is the EIT good for that? It's cheap to mass-produce, super 00:17:51.519 --> 00:17:58.089 portable, super low power. So that would be a great place to start. What could we 00:17:58.089 --> 00:18:05.330 do first? I'm going to go back to this image again and have a look. Tuberculosis 00:18:05.330 --> 00:18:09.110 affects a lot of people in the developing world and you don't need amazing spatial 00:18:09.110 --> 00:18:14.901 resolution to detect it. That would be a good one. Or what about a pulmonary edema? 00:18:14.901 --> 00:18:21.660 Pulmonary edema is water on the lung. It's actually already used for that. You can 00:18:21.660 --> 00:18:26.640 quite easily see the different volume present, or the different conductivity 00:18:26.640 --> 00:18:33.590 maps it's called, of a working lung and a not so working lung right there. 00:18:33.590 --> 00:18:41.410 Next steps. So what should we do to make this technique better? What should we do 00:18:41.410 --> 00:18:48.200 for OpenEIT to make it better? If you want to innovate again, that's the github 00:18:48.200 --> 00:18:53.460 project. Just go ahead. Oh that's an avocado, it has a seat in the middle. Who 00:18:53.460 --> 00:19:05.519 knew? I do. So I see the two main routes forward as: One would be this low-cost biomedical 00:19:05.519 --> 00:19:10.690 imaging for the developing world. You could just stick with the static imaging 00:19:10.690 --> 00:19:16.270 reconstruction because why not. you'd need a few more electrodes than it currently 00:19:16.270 --> 00:19:22.240 has. One of the main problems with the technique is how you stick it to the skin. 00:19:22.240 --> 00:19:25.730 So my suggestion for that is why don't you just use a water bath and stick the body 00:19:25.730 --> 00:19:31.929 part of interest in a body of water, because water gets rid of a lot of the, 00:19:31.929 --> 00:19:38.390 it's called the contact impedance problem. Or, on the kind of exciting science front, 00:19:38.390 --> 00:19:47.230 you've got the advancing neuroscience option. Which would be measuring both high 00:19:47.230 --> 00:19:50.340 spatial resolution and high time resolution. So that's the non-invasive 00:19:50.340 --> 00:19:57.710 electrophysiology solution. Or, and that would be super awesome, there's a couple 00:19:57.710 --> 00:20:03.629 of ways forward to do that and I'm going to sort of discuss each of those. 00:20:03.629 --> 00:20:10.169 So roughly there's physical configuration improvements that could be done. There's 00:20:10.169 --> 00:20:14.480 things that you can do to improve the spatial resolution. There's things you can 00:20:14.480 --> 00:20:19.480 do to improve the time resolution. And this is interesting tack on at the end 00:20:19.480 --> 00:20:25.210 that I thought I'd mentioned, which is 'write' functionality. So we're using very 00:20:25.210 --> 00:20:33.090 small currents to read an image. What if we pumped the current up a little before 00:20:33.090 --> 00:20:38.939 you know it you're writing. I think not invasive deep brain stimulation in a 00:20:38.939 --> 00:20:48.670 focused way, that would be very very cool. So, contact impedance. Major problem right 00:20:48.670 --> 00:20:54.059 now, there is a well-known solution I haven't done it yet you do this thing 00:20:54.059 --> 00:21:00.909 called differential referencing, common mode rejection should be done I haven't 00:21:00.909 --> 00:21:05.069 done it that's the next step. That means that it will work when you just attach it 00:21:05.069 --> 00:21:10.630 with electrodes on the body. What happens is, electrodes have a like some 00:21:10.630 --> 00:21:16.620 capacitance and different amounts which kind of interfere with the the measurement 00:21:16.620 --> 00:21:19.690 that you want to make which you want to be very accurate and just of your body. You 00:21:19.690 --> 00:21:24.529 don't want to include the electrode information in there that's changing. 00:21:24.529 --> 00:21:30.110 There's a way to remove that that's well known already. Another physical 00:21:30.110 --> 00:21:34.870 configuration improvements: just increase the number of electrodes. Wonderful, now 00:21:34.870 --> 00:21:41.640 you've just improved the resolution. Or the placing the part in water. Another set 00:21:41.640 --> 00:21:46.700 of next steps would be on the mathematical side. I mentioned that I use linear back 00:21:46.700 --> 00:21:55.759 projection which is a wonderful technique, that's how they do CAT scans. With X-rays 00:21:55.759 --> 00:21:59.310 that's exactly what they do. However, it makes some appalling 00:21:59.310 --> 00:22:06.649 assumptions, like parent moves and straight lines. That is not true. What you 00:22:06.649 --> 00:22:11.209 should do is get a finite element model and solve Maxwell's equations because 00:22:11.209 --> 00:22:18.630 current bends around objects. Actually it works in three dimensions too which might 00:22:18.630 --> 00:22:23.639 not be all that surprising but it needs to be solved for those three dimensions which 00:22:23.639 --> 00:22:26.810 is why you just need to solve Maxwell's equations and 00:22:26.810 --> 00:22:30.899 create a finite element model. And there's a quite a bit of work on 00:22:30.899 --> 00:22:34.610 mathematical solutions that get higher resolution. 00:22:34.610 --> 00:22:42.189 That's another improvement area. And now as I mentioned this awesome new technique. 00:22:42.189 --> 00:22:44.649 Which, actualy there's a paper on this year called 00:22:44.649 --> 00:22:50.990 magneto-acoustic electical tomography. You might remember 00:22:50.990 --> 00:22:55.580 the FBI rule from high school. When you have a current flowing, 00:22:55.580 --> 00:23:02.429 perpendicular to that there will be a force. Now that force, say it's vibrating 00:23:02.429 --> 00:23:07.309 with 50 kilohertz. that's the AC signal that you're sending through. Now you have 00:23:07.309 --> 00:23:11.460 a vibrating compression wave. That's sound. You can pick that up with a little 00:23:11.460 --> 00:23:19.580 piezoelectric element. And that's actually a focus of work. From that you can get 00:23:19.580 --> 00:23:27.070 really good edge information, because as I mentioned earlier, sound scatters at 00:23:27.070 --> 00:23:31.460 edges. So you would also get the electrical impedance tomography 00:23:31.460 --> 00:23:38.549 information for the tissue sensitivity. Why not combine those results together and 00:23:38.549 --> 00:23:43.259 you would have a better tool. It currently gets lesser resolution in the middle 00:23:43.259 --> 00:23:50.180 simply from how you every combination of electrodes just ends up having a less 00:23:50.180 --> 00:23:56.799 dense number in the middle. You can also do something as simple as increasing the 00:23:56.799 --> 00:24:02.049 power that you send through if you're game to do that. This is a kind of gory 00:24:02.049 --> 00:24:07.961 picture. Right now epileptics, if they're really troubled by their problem, which 00:24:07.961 --> 00:24:13.460 they are often, they go into a hospital have their brains opened up and they 00:24:13.460 --> 00:24:18.580 stick this array on their head through their skull. And they leave it open 00:24:18.580 --> 00:24:24.340 for a week. And they try to induce seizures through sleep deprivation. 00:24:24.340 --> 00:24:30.440 And then they measure the activation potentials that way to locate the foci or 00:24:30.440 --> 00:24:36.200 where they going to do surgery to stop you from having seizures. But it would be much 00:24:36.200 --> 00:24:40.260 better and nicer if you could do it not invasively and you probably can if you 00:24:40.260 --> 00:24:43.600 improve the time resolution of EIT. there's nothing stopping you from doing 00:24:43.600 --> 00:24:50.360 that by the way. You just have to, like, it's just a next step really. 00:24:50.360 --> 00:24:56.919 And then I'll also mention write- functionality. So there was a paper that 00:24:56.919 --> 00:25:02.700 came out halfway through this year by a guy called Neil Grossman (?) and what he 00:25:02.700 --> 00:25:09.170 did is, he showed that you can stimulate neurons by sending current through the 00:25:09.170 --> 00:25:18.739 skull and in a focused way. Now why that's interesting is, you can non-invasively 00:25:18.739 --> 00:25:23.190 stimulate neurons. So that's the write- functionality. It's unknown what 00:25:23.190 --> 00:25:27.950 resolution is or how well you could control the the focal point here. But it 00:25:27.950 --> 00:25:34.220 works in the principle of beat frequencies so he sent through two kilohertz and 2.05 00:25:34.220 --> 00:25:42.379 kilohertz and basically had a beat frequency of 10 Hertz arise from that and 00:25:42.379 --> 00:25:50.279 basically stimulated neurons in this area that he can control via an x- and y-axis 00:25:50.279 --> 00:25:59.940 which is very impressive. Leaves a lot of questions open. Those are some possible 00:25:59.940 --> 00:26:06.309 next steps that it could go in. Obviously I think this is interesting. I hope that 00:26:06.309 --> 00:26:11.340 you do too. I'd love it if you would want to sign up to a mailing list I'll give a 00:26:11.340 --> 00:26:17.049 link on the next page. If you want to collaborate email me. If you know any 00:26:17.049 --> 00:26:22.070 funding bodies that might be interested in the developing medical imaging for 00:26:22.070 --> 00:26:26.330 the third world I'd love to be put in contact. If you wanted a kit and, if there 00:26:26.330 --> 00:26:30.230 were enough people that wanted a kit, probably of the next version which would 00:26:30.230 --> 00:26:36.200 have 32 electrodes sign up to the mailing list, talk to me. Thanks. 00:26:36.200 --> 00:26:46.820 applause Rintoul: Thank you 00:26:46.820 --> 00:26:49.690 applause Herald Angel: Thank you very much. We have a little bit 00:26:49.690 --> 00:26:57.610 time for Q&A. And please if you have to leave the room make it in a very quiet 00:26:57.610 --> 00:27:05.730 way. So is there ... there are some questions I've seen microphone 4 first. 00:27:05.730 --> 00:27:08.970 Please go ahead. Audience member: So, a great thing 00:27:08.970 --> 00:27:15.649 thinking about developing countries and getting them medical tech. But at the very 00:27:15.649 --> 00:27:20.889 first beginning you said imagine a world where this imaging would be all available 00:27:20.889 --> 00:27:26.610 like every day and it creeped me out a little bit. Do you really think that it's 00:27:26.610 --> 00:27:33.740 a good idea to go in the shower in the morning and have your I don't know your 00:27:33.740 --> 00:27:40.019 bathtub telling you that there is a small mass inside your lungs. 00:27:40.019 --> 00:27:46.889 Rintoul: That's a good question. Basically the question was: There's a privacy 00:27:46.889 --> 00:27:52.360 concern with looking inside your body. It doesn't sound that great to some people. 00:27:52.360 --> 00:27:56.200 To those people I would say you should turn off I know that sounds a little 00:27:56.200 --> 00:28:05.179 harsh. But please just turn it off, don't use it. And with all scientific movements 00:28:05.179 --> 00:28:12.080 forward comes great risk, I also say. And it can be used for good or evil and it's 00:28:12.080 --> 00:28:17.769 up to us as a society how we want to choose to use it. And how we structure 00:28:17.769 --> 00:28:24.510 ourselves and potentially motivate and incentivize corporations to use it in a 00:28:24.510 --> 00:28:31.919 responsible way. Part of making this open is I hope that, basically if people have 00:28:31.919 --> 00:28:36.470 access to it you can choose for yourself how you'd want to use it. 00:28:36.470 --> 00:28:40.809 Herald Angel: And next question would be from the Signal Angel please. 00:28:40.809 --> 00:28:45.070 Signal Angel: Yes I have a couple of questions from the internet. First of all, 00:28:45.070 --> 00:28:51.439 what type of AC frequencies in use? the asker assumes sinusoidal but he wonders if 00:28:51.439 --> 00:28:54.779 you also tried square wave, triangular and other shapes. 00:28:54.779 --> 00:29:00.360 Rintoul: That's also a really interesting question. It's about what kinds of waves 00:29:00.360 --> 00:29:08.580 are used, what kinds of AC signals. Typically it's done with AC sine waves 00:29:08.580 --> 00:29:14.500 ranging all over the place, depending on what application you want to use up for. I 00:29:14.500 --> 00:29:19.980 mentioned multi frequency EIT for cancer detection. That uses a lot of different 00:29:19.980 --> 00:29:26.090 frequencies so if you wanted to use other waveforms I think that would be really 00:29:26.090 --> 00:29:32.840 interesting. Nobody's tried, you can, that should be done. 00:29:32.840 --> 00:29:38.740 Herald: So since there's a big queue on microphone 3 I would go there please. 00:29:38.740 --> 00:29:44.630 Audience member: Yes I have a technical question. Assuming that you won't use this 00:29:44.630 --> 00:29:50.590 techniques on humans or organic matter at all and what are the limitations for the 00:29:50.590 --> 00:29:56.190 resolution. The spatial resolution. And is there a possibility to reduce the spatial 00:29:56.190 --> 00:29:59.100 resolution. Rintoul: You mean increase the spatial 00:29:59.100 --> 00:30:06.179 resolution or reduce it? Audience member: Reduce the voxel size 00:30:06.179 --> 00:30:12.470 Rintoul: So increase the spatial resolution. Yes absolutely. So I was 00:30:12.470 --> 00:30:16.240 trying to go through a few of the next steps that could get to that. One of them 00:30:16.240 --> 00:30:21.259 is magneto-acousto electrical tomography because you get two different types of 00:30:21.259 --> 00:30:27.580 information which you could put together to form a higher resolution image. So 00:30:27.580 --> 00:30:33.320 that's one way and if you didn't need to worry about human safety I recommend you 00:30:33.320 --> 00:30:39.240 just turn the power up, that will also work. 00:30:39.240 --> 00:30:46.389 Herald: Okay I think we go back to the signal angel for one short one please. 00:30:46.389 --> 00:30:49.890 Signal Angel: Yes I have another question from the internet. from a doctor this 00:30:49.890 --> 00:30:54.340 time. He wonders if there are any clinical studies that compare pulmonary edema 00:30:54.340 --> 00:30:59.919 diagnostics with EIT to ultrasound and why don't we just work on cheap ultrasound 00:30:59.919 --> 00:31:03.139 instead. Rintoul: That's a good question. People 00:31:03.139 --> 00:31:08.289 are working on cheap ultrasounds. Ultrasound gives different information to 00:31:08.289 --> 00:31:14.360 EIT. It has a problem of the sound scattering. So it's a different type of 00:31:14.360 --> 00:31:21.289 information which has different pros and cons. And and I think people should make 00:31:21.289 --> 00:31:27.169 cheap ultrasound. And I would like to see the hybrid modality come together. You can 00:31:27.169 --> 00:31:31.769 get really good tissue distinction with EIT so there's pros and cons. 00:31:31.769 --> 00:31:36.680 Herald: Okay then, microphone 2 please. Audience member: You had a really good 00:31:36.680 --> 00:31:44.649 talk my question so far you always need direct contact to the electrode, right? So 00:31:44.649 --> 00:31:50.519 it has to be direct contact or in water. Is there way to detect or measure the 00:31:50.519 --> 00:31:56.659 signal without direct contact? So maybe in if the if the object is in air or any 00:31:56.659 --> 00:32:01.419 other gas? Rintoul: Right. I wish there was. No is 00:32:01.419 --> 00:32:07.570 the short answer. Unless ... Audience member: Any research on making it 00:32:07.570 --> 00:32:11.129 happen? Rintoul: Well yeah you can you can use 00:32:11.129 --> 00:32:20.129 X-rays. They work wonderfully to to go through the air. But if you use them I 00:32:20.129 --> 00:32:24.220 mean you do increase your chance of cancer so don't use them all the time on 00:32:24.220 --> 00:32:29.499 yourself. Again CAT scanners are a little bit expensive. 00:32:29.499 --> 00:32:35.529 Herald: Thank you and I think we have time for one more from microphone 3 00:32:35.529 --> 00:32:41.970 Audience member: My question would be what, so maybe I've missed it, but what's 00:32:41.970 --> 00:32:47.009 the order of magnitude for cost so would this be feasible at like a hackerspace for 00:32:47.009 --> 00:32:53.749 this to implement. And does the industry see the possibility to make money. 00:32:53.749 --> 00:33:00.779 Rintoul: Yes a lot of those sort of these early like R&D papers yeah they should be 00:33:00.779 --> 00:33:06.870 applied and you could make money with it absolutely. And there's no component in 00:33:06.870 --> 00:33:14.960 there that costs more than a couple of cents. I suppose a cortex m3 like costs a 00:33:14.960 --> 00:33:19.570 couple of dollars. And I mean I don't know what your budget is but yes you I think 00:33:19.570 --> 00:33:24.309 you could do this in a hackerspace without any problems. There's nothing stopping 00:33:24.309 --> 00:33:29.590 anyone from doing this and as we know microcontrollers are becoming cheaper and 00:33:29.590 --> 00:33:36.460 cheaper. So why not. Herald: I don't get Hasty's signs from the 00:33:36.460 --> 00:33:40.059 sideline so I think I can take another question from 2 please. 00:33:40.059 --> 00:33:46.600 Audience member: So far you have showed us images of 2d planes. What about volumes 00:33:46.600 --> 00:33:52.369 Rintoul: Yes so there's work on solving for volumes using finite element models 00:33:52.369 --> 00:34:02.759 and solving Maxwell's equations. Basically I just did the shortest route to reach 00:34:02.759 --> 00:34:07.670 image reconstruction that was available which was linear back projection which is 00:34:07.670 --> 00:34:12.280 typically done in a 2d plane. So absolutely, you can do it in three 00:34:12.280 --> 00:34:16.370 dimensions. Herald: So I'm very sorry we are out of 00:34:16.370 --> 00:34:23.550 time the queue back there you can have the chance to chat with our speaker just right 00:34:23.550 --> 00:34:31.880 now. The next talk coming up is in about 15 minutes and it's I think also in 00:34:31.880 --> 00:34:36.920 English. See you then and a big round of applause for our speaker, excuse me. 00:34:36.920 --> 00:34:42.460 applause 00:34:42.460 --> 00:34:47.725 music 00:34:47.725 --> 00:35:04.000 subtitles created by c3subtitles.de in the year 2017. Join, and help us!