Synergy of medicine and technology
 
Syntermed Live Login Button


Products
Nuclear Cardiology
Brain PET
Support
Downloads
About Us



1.888.263.4446

We're Here For You
Click here for support





 
 
 
Resources
Discover below some of the valuable resources available for your nuclear practice.
 
Over the years we have compiled a multitude of articles, webcasts and whitepapers related to our products and our field. They are assembled here to help you find exactly what you are looking for.
 
  
 
News, Whitepapers & Press Releases
showing 1 thru 10 of 19 records   < Prev   Next >

University research sparks economic growth  

Emory’s highly successful technology transfer program and product pipeline illustrates how federally funded university discoveries can be guided from the laboratory through the patenting and licensing process, to the marketplace, and into the hands of consumers and patients. Read more my clicking the link below.

 


 


August 02, 2010  read more...

Syntermed Launches NeuroQ 3.5 at ICAD 2010  

Syntermed Launches NeuroQ 3.5 - Nuclear Medicine Diagnostic Program at Alzheimer’s Association 2010 International Conference

More than 40 percent of patients diagnosed with early dementia, were found not to have Alzheimer’s disease on autopsy. Other forms of dementia and conditions that can cause memory problems go undiagnosed and untreated. Syntermed's NeuroQ software program increases accuracy of FDG-PET brain imaging for improved diagnosis of dementia and AD. Syntermed, Inc. is also collaborating with Avid Radiopharmaceuticals to quantify Amyloid uptake for Alzheimer’s diagnosis. Secure remote access of PET Scans for Clinical Trials is now possible with Syntermed Live™.

 

Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) July 12, 2010

At the Alzheimer’s Association 2010 International Conference (ICAD) July 10-14 in Honolulu, HI, Syntermed, Inc. launched NeuroQ™ version 3.5, a nuclear medicine quantitative software platform for analysis and image display of brain FDG-PET scans. NeuroQ can increase physician accuracy in diagnosing and differentiating the many types of dementia, compared to visual interpretation alone of FDG-PET. The update adds ten new features that improve performance, processing, speed, and quality control and is compatible with Syntermed Live™ for secure remote access to images and data.

The company is working on a module for NeuroQ to quantify PET amyloid imaging of the brain. Amyloid deposits in the brain are a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease.

Syntermed also announced it is collaborating with Avid Radiopharmaceuticals and building a database of normal brain AV-45 PET images to integrate into NeuroQ. AV-45 is a radiopharmaceutical contrast agent developed by AVID that distinguishes with PET imaging amyloid deposits in the brain of living patients. Currently, Alzheimer’s can only be definitively diagnosed after death on autopsy when beta-amyloid plaque deposits are found.

Michael T. Lee, Chairman and CEO of Syntermed said, “This is an exciting time for Syntermed. We have the leading tool available for use today to quantify FDG-PET scans. NeuroQ provides physicians and their patients the added measure of confidence to have an accurate differential diagnosis of dementia.”

He added, “Our support for AV-45, as soon as it becomes commercially available, will offer physicians the next generation of a proven diagnostic tool to help them even more definitively diagnose Alzheimer’s from other dementias and monitor its pathology.”

There is a high rate of misdiagnosis of Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia. More than 40% of patients diagnosed with early dementia who are found on autopsy not to have Alzheimer’s disease, were misdiagnosed with AD during life. Other forms of dementia and conditions that can cause memory problems go undiagnosed and untreated.

FDG-PET is used in the diagnosis of dementia. Including all dementias, more than 30% of patients are misdiagnosed. Using FDG-PET in the diagnosis of dementia increases the accuracy of the diagnosis to approximately 90%. Expertise is required to interpret the complex and quantitative data in the scans. Most physicians do not frequently read these images.

Daniel Silverman, M.D., Ph.D., head of Neuronuclear Imaging section, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, said, “For patients whose clinical work-up has not led to a definitive diagnosis, brain PET is currently our single best tool to differentiate dementias, especially in the early stages of the disease. Adding quantitative analysis to PET can further improve the ability to diagnose the cause of the dementia.”

NeuroQ goes beyond the visual read and provides valuable non-subjective diagnostic information. Metabolic levels in more than 240 pre-defined regions of the brain are rapidly compared to those in the normal database and quantified to show the degree of abnormality and statistical significance of the findings.

NeuroQ is the only brain-imaging program that can automatically analyze the difference between two FDG-PET studies of the same patient over time, creating a more exact region-by-region comparison throughout the brain.

It is compatible with Syntermed Live™, the company’s nuclear lab shared remote communications system. Reading and referring physicians can share and review high-resolution images and diagnostic reports securely from any PC/MAC at any time or place.

For clinical trials of new Alzheimer’s treatments or PET imaging agents, files from all sites can be transferred and securely stored, giving the core laboratory access to all data for analysis. Files are quickly and easily downloaded for both visual and quantitative blind reads.

Ken VanTrain, Syntermed President said, “NeuroQ with Syntermed Live is especially attractive to companies conducting clinical trials. It offers a cost savings solution to quickly and securely manage data from the acquisition to the blind read sites, eliminating or minimizing the need for travel.”

Daniel Silverman, M.D., Ph.D., director of UCLA Medical Center’s Brain Imaging Clinic and Syntermed developed NeuroQ. It was the first quantitative program cleared by the FDA for analyzing PET scans to assist with the differential diagnosis of dementia.

About Syntermed, Inc. Syntermed, a privately owned Atlanta-based nuclear medicine imaging and informatics software company, transformed the nuclear imaging field by being the first to offer PET and SPECT software programs untethered from imaging hardware. Its software powers more than 40 percent of the nuclear cardiology labs in the US; and its NeuroQ™ is the most widely used commercially available Brain PET quantitation solution in the world. The company’s software is licensed to medical imaging companies including GE Healthcare, Siemens Medical Solutions, Philips Medical Systems, McKesson Information Solutions, and Cardinal Health; and is compatible with any nuclear medicine workstation or PC/MAC that supports Microsoft® Windows® operating system.

###



July 11, 2010  read more...

Limited time offer to purchase Dr. Silverman's book  

FDG-PET imaging is increasingly important in the differential diagnosis of dementia.  For a limited time, get a 15% discount on the Dan Silverman, M.D. book that details when and why to add PET to the clinical evaluation of dementia.

Order Now: $130 shipping included.



Book Cover



July 08, 2010  read more...

PET brain software for improving diagnosis of dementia  

NeuroQ 3.5,  an FDA-cleared software application, can analyze the difference between two PET brain studies of the same patient providing an analysis for progression or regression of disease. Other programs can only analyze in comparison to a database of normal brain scans. NeuroQ 3.5 through rapid and automated quantification of standardized regions of interest (sROIs), NeuroQ™ allows you to compare the activity of brain regions in an individual scan to regional activity values derived from a database of normal scans through quantitative and statistical assessments.


NeuroQ 3.5 – Feature List

1. Fixed Region Save Screen - provides the ability to save just the cluster screen from the NeuroQ results page.

2. Program Screen Display Default – provides the capability to remember the color map and scaling settings so that if they are changed by the user they will keep those settings and not revert back to the default settings if the screen is changed during review.

3. Save Table Update – modifies the save table feature so that when you save tables it saves both the 47 clusters and all regions in the same file.

4. Added Quality Control Processing Nomenclature - provides text in the saved review file so that from the MCP display it will indicate if the study has gone through scalp correction or rigid registration.

5. Improved Performance - improved speed for elastic and rigid registration.

6. Normal Limit Development Module – provides the ability to create a userdefined SPECT or PET brain normal database to use in the NeuroQ application.

7. Slice Display Update – adds the ability to display the patients brain slices both before and after registration.

8. Default Reformatting Iterations Set to 10 - if rigid registration is performed the default iterations used for reformatting is set to 10 which was found to be the optimal number of iterations if rigid registration is performed on the data based on a UCLA study.

9. Auto Processing - if rigid registration is performed then the program will automatically go to main page and start reformatting with 10 iterations.

10. Generic Nomenclature – established naming convention so that the program can handle new imaging agents, i.e. amyloid, SPECT, user-defined normal limits etc

 



June 24, 2010  read more...

Purchase the Nuclear Cardiology Assessment CD.  

Buy Assessment CD



June 25, 2010  read more...

Background information on NeuroQ.  

November 13, 2008  read more...

Phase Analysis White Paper.  

November 14, 2008  read more...

Cardiologist use Syntermed Live to Improve Diagnosis  

March 29, 2009  read more...

Syntermed Announces New Products and Agreements at SNM  

March 01, 2009  read more...

Arrhythmias Gated SPECT cardiac myocardial perfusion  

November 14, 2008  read more...
 
 
SPOTLIGHT
 
 
Syntermed in the News
University research sparks economic growth
icon
 
 
NeuroQ 3.5 at ICAD 2010
Syntermed Launches NeuroQ 3.5 at ICAD 2010
icon
 
 
PET Alzheimer Book
Limited time offer to purchase Dr. Silverman's book
icon