Quincy Medical Group Now Offering More Advanced Breast Imaging with 3T MRI Technology

May 25, 2021

QUIN­CY, IL – Quin­cy Med­ical Group (QMG) recent­ly began offer­ing Breast MRIs uti­liz­ing 3T MRI tech­nol­o­gy, pro­vid­ing local patients with more advanced imaging.

In 2019, QMG announced the addi­tion of a 3T MRI machine, the SIGNA™ Pio­neer from GE Health­care, which cre­ates the high­est-qual­i­ty images cur­rent­ly avail­able. QMG is the only facil­i­ty in the local area to offer 3T imag­ing tech­nol­o­gy and just recent­ly expand­ed the MRI pro­gram to include breast imaging.

QMG Radi­ol­o­gist Dr. Robert Haag is fel­low­ship-trained in Breast Imag­ing Radi­ol­o­gy and said the 3T MRI pro­vides detailed imag­ing, allow­ing for more accu­rate diag­noses of breast can­cers at their ear­li­est stages.

3T stands for 3 Tes­la,’ which is the strength of the mag­net­ic field in an MRI machine. In gen­er­al, the high­er the T,’ the high­er the image qual­i­ty,” he explained. A 3T also pro­vides a greater Sig­nal to Noise’ ratio, which is a key deter­mi­nant in gen­er­at­ing the best image quality.”

A Breast MRI is not a replace­ment for mam­mog­ra­phy or ultra­sound imag­ing, but rather a sup­ple­men­tal tool to tra­di­tion­al screen­ing meth­ods. Breast MRI may be used to screen women at high risk for breast can­cer, eval­u­ate the extent of can­cer fol­low­ing diag­no­sis, or fur­ther eval­u­ate abnor­mal­i­ties seen on mammography.

A screen­ing mam­mo­gram is most often used for women, how­ev­er, if there is con­cern based on that mam­mo­gram, our radi­ol­o­gy team may order an ultra­sound,” Dr. Haag explained. For some women, after those two steps, fur­ther eval­u­a­tion is need­ed and that is when 3T MRI tech­nol­o­gy is utilized.”

If a patient is diag­nosed with breast can­cer, the 3T MRI is effec­tive in deter­min­ing the extent of the disease.

After being diag­nosed with breast can­cer, a breast MRI may be per­formed to deter­mine how large the can­cer is and whether it involves the under­ly­ing mus­cle, if there are oth­er can­cers in the same breast, and whether there is an unsus­pect­ed can­cer in the oppo­site breast,” Dr. Haag said.

Dr. Haag said rou­tine breast can­cer screen­ing is impor­tant. To under­stand their screen­ing needs, patients should speak to their pri­ma­ry care providers or obstetricians/​gynecologists. For more infor­ma­tion on the QMG Women’s Health Cen­ter, vis­it https://​quin​cymed​group​.com/​m​e​d​i​c​a​l​-​s​e​r​v​i​c​e​s​/​o​bgyn/ or call (217) 222‑6550, ext. 3437.