This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Health & Fitness

Kaiser Redwood City installs hi-tech brain scanner in new office

Maagnetoencephalograph, or MEG, used to identify brain structures and diagnose illness at new KP Redwood City Medical Office opening 2021

Typical "MEG" or Magnetoencephalograph device, mfr. photo
Typical "MEG" or Magnetoencephalograph device, mfr. photo

A machine that provides high-quality images of brain activity and functions was recently installed at Kaiser Permanente’s new Redwood City Medical Office building.

The MEG arrived in 18 wooden crates and was installed at Kaiser Permanente Redwood City's new medical office

The Magnetoencephalography machine – nicknamed the MEG - arrived in 18 large wooden crates. The machine – one of a handful now in California - provides doctors with ultra-high quality data which is converted to images of brain activity by detecting tiny electro-magnetic currents our brains produce.

Typical magnetoencephalography images of the brain

A MEG image shows doctors images where brain activity is taking place, for example, during a seizure or when the brain is involved in a thought. Think, for example, the parts of the brain involved in making a fist.

Find out what's happening in San Carloswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

”It’s a device that we’re going to use to precisely evaluate normal and abnormal activity in the brain, “ said Mark Sedrak, MD, Director of Functional Neurosurgery at Kaiser Permanente Redwood City. “ It will be used for brain mapping and epilepsy detection, sort of like high resolution GPS for the brain”.

There was a certain excitement as tech crews began opening the 18 wooden crates and putting Kaiser Permanente’s new MEG together.

Find out what's happening in San Carloswith free, real-time updates from Patch.

When finished, the MEG looks a little like a very large salon hair dryer setup: the patient sits in a comfortable chair, the patients head is in a recess that nearly surrounds the skull.

Typical set-up of the MEG after completely built up

Highly sensitive superconducting electronic circuits in the MEG’s recess detect brain activity while the patient is awake and being recorded in in real time. The powerful MEG images will give Kaiser Permanente surgeons a much clearer picture of where functions in the brain are located.

Kaiser Permanente workers begin installing the MEG in KP Redwood City's new medical office building

“We’ll be able to directly see where the seizure is focused or where critical structures of the brain are, such as speech and motor functgion,” Sedrak said. “It will precisely guide our diagnostic and treatment plans.”

The MEG will be in Kaiser Permanente Redwood City’s new medical office when it opens early in 2021.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?