We learn how biomeds manage the pressure of keeping CT scanners up and running with
minimum disruption of hospital routine.
Imagine you owned a million-dollar piece of earth-moving equipment
that was making you so much money you hated to shut it down for an oil change.
That is analogous to the pressure on clinical engineers and technicians who have to
stop the flow of patient imaging for close to 4 hours every 3 months, minimum, to perform
routine preventive maintenance (PM) on computed tomography (CT) scanners. Heavily used
scanners may need even more frequent PMs. If the routine PM is not performed, the machine
will inevitably stall, and then the repairs will take longer. That, too, is a matter of
time.
Time is the biggest hurdle a CT engineer has to deal with, says service
engineer Greg Adamson, a senior CT specialist for Livingston Technologies, a for-profit
division of the nonprofit St Boniface Health System, which operates hospitals and clinics
in New Jersey. Adamson works out of Toms River where his home site is the Community
Medical Center. The medical center has four CTs and operates the busiest emergency
room on the East Coast, he says.
It is not just CT scanners that need maintenance, of course. Other modalities also need
PM, but CT scanners are so reliable and durable and their images are so valuable that they
have become one of the workhorses of radiology. Stopping them is an annoyance to everyone.
Most CT departments run a very tight and very full schedule, says Adamson,
with a 30-days-or-more waiting period for the next patient opening in some
facilities. This makes unscheduled downtime very stressful. It affects patient care almost
immediately. A 4-hour delay can create ripples throughout the hospital for days.
Adamson has learned to plan PMs in advance. I schedule my PMs a year in
advance, he says. I schedule early in the morning at the first of the month.
That way the clinical staff will know there is a 4-hour window, and no patients will be
scheduled in that 4 hours on that machine. Its a necessary evil, but that way I may
have no downtime on that machine for the whole month.
Overall, Adamson services 12 scanners. If Im doing a main scanner that
operates on a 12-hour shift Ill do that PM once a month, otherwise quarterly. I used
to base them on slice counts, but thats no longer valid, its more like the
scanning times.
Richard Cunningham is a service engineer for TSS/Imaging a division of Providence
Health Systems in Portland, Ore. He agrees that time pressure is a factor in servicing
CTs.
There is increased pressure to keep the CT running all the time, he says.
Our three CTs are averaging 70 to 75 patients per day. That is outpatient,
inpatient, and the ER. The other day they did 98 patients on a machine. That was the most
they had ever done.
Cunningham says it is vital that the service engineer has full access to the CT
vendors operational software. Understanding that software allows the CE to access
the scanner, he says, and to talk knowledgeably to the vendors technical specialists
if necessary. If a system has been down more than 5 or 6 hours, we will call the
vendor and say we need some help on this.
Cunningham says it took him a year or two and many hours of study and training before
he got comfortable enough to work without having someone on the other end of the
phone.
Having the knowledge is one thing; having the experience is another, he
says.
Even the Smell
A lot has to be done in the 4 hours that the CT scanner is shut down for PManother
time pressure on the service engineer. It involves both mechanical- and computer-system
reviews.
PMs are pretty straightforward, says John Engel, a senior systems-training
specialist for DITEC, a Cleveland-based company that runs maintenance classes on CT and
other imaging modalities. CT is fundamentally an x-ray system, so if you understand
x-ray, to understand CT is not that difficult. The CT adds rotation and an automated
patient transport system.
Engel says the mechanical side of the PM involves cleaning and oiling and replacing air
filters. Cleanliness is next to godliness. You make sure the voltages are correct.
You want to make sure the patient transport answers commands and the gantry is tilted
correctly.
Then there is the equally important software side of the machine. One can look at
a CT as being a sort of computer, says Engel. Software-controlled settings may have
to be adjusted. If changes are made, then backup copies of the altered software have to be
created in case of a computer failure. A quality control of the imaging has to be
performed. If a test scan is run and it comes out right, that generally means
everything is working correctly, Engel says.
The archiving system on the CTs computer also needs to be checked. The CT
has several hard drives usually. We have to make sure the drives work, Engel says.
He adds that archived images may have to be transferred to backup tapes.
Roy J. Hall is senior instructor at the Philips Medical Systems training center in
Cleveland. He trains Philips in-house CT technicians as well as independents who
work for facilities that have installed Philips scanners.
Calibration software, by law, must be provided to any purchaser of a scanner. That
software includes diagnostic programs for each of the subsystems of a scanner, to guide
technicians to any parts that have to be replaced. These days, Hall says, most replacement
is of modular components like a chassis or a circuit board, rather than tiny individual
parts. The machines are easier to service than they used to be, and the reliability
is a lot better too, he says.
Hall agrees that rigorous PM is the key to keeping a scanner operating. Its
amazing how important just being observant is, he says. [The engineer] has to
look for anything thats worn or metal shavings or loose hardware in the bottom of
the machineany telltale signbefore there are major problems. It might be even
what something smells like. The service engineer can save a lot of money by catching
something small before it gets big.
X-ray Tube Mayhem
Finding little pieces of loose hardware in a scanner is quite possible, given the
enormous physical stresses that are placed on the CT as the x-ray tube rotates. Livingston
Technologys Adamson has computed these stresses. He expresses them in g-forces,
multiples of Earths gravitational pull. He says the stresses exceed 40 gs.
A 1-lb object mounted on the outer edge of the scan frame would exceed 40 lbs of
force on its mounting point. The x-ray tube weighs in at around 200 lbs, and its
mounted on the outermost edge of the scan frame, thats equal to 9,600 lbs.
That is one reason Adamson checks his scan-frame fittings carefully, making sure that
the hardware is tight. We have had things come loose. Its not dangerous to the
patient but in the gantry it destroys everything in its path.
Because x-ray tubes last only a year or so, replacing them is one of the many non-PM
tasks that cut into service engineers schedules. While most CT downtime is computer
related, replacing x-ray tubes is also a cumbersome and costly physical task. Better x-ray
tubes rank high on some peoples wish list.
In the real world a frequent problem is that the x-ray tube will die, says
DITECs Engel. When you replace a tube you have to recalibrate the entire
system. The new one has to be calibrated so the vertical x-ray output is through the exact
center of the scanner. The vendor software can usually do this. Some vendors will only do
the calibration if its their tube, which runs the cost up.
They are only about 1% efficient, says Phillips Hall. They will
burn off 99% of their energy as heat. For 60 kW in you may get only 100 W out. We would
love to see x-ray tubes with even 5% efficiency. That would be a great thing.
Dosage
While service engineers do not get directly involved in patient care, the work
they perform does impact the clinical aspect of scanning. This is particularly true with
the monitoring of radiation dosage settings. As CT scanners add to their slice counts and
the number of rotations through which a patient is scanned64-slice scanners are on
the near horizonpatient radiation exposure is becoming an increasingly sensitive
issue. While the technician operating the CT scanner during a study can overcome faults on
the machine by raising the dosage, this is not an attractive alternative. An important
task for service engineers is checking dosage software and hardware faults that can effect
dosage.
Part of the PM is to verify dosage, says Adamson. That is usually
done on a yearly basis working with the (medical) physicist. A filter can get stuck, so
the technician has to bump dosage. Its really rare, but it can happen. That is my
problem, absolutely.
Travel Time
For service engineers who maintain scanners at multiple sitesand most of
them dotraveling between site repairs can become another time-related pressure.
Travel time is a big issue, says Adamson. He says nighttime repairs often have
to be scheduled so that the scanner will not be shut down during business hours.
To keep the travel time of its SEs to a minimum, Toshiba America Medical Systems (TAMS)
has taken two steps not uncommon in the industry.
Better than 93% of our customers are under (maintenance) contracts with us,
says Brian Turnbull, vice president of the TAMS technology services business unit based in
Tustin, Calif. There are no parts available on the market so [we do] the service
ourselves.
TAMS cross-trains its SEs on multiple modalities so that the SE can service different
modalities at a location. TAMS deploys its SEs according to a service-city
concept, says Turnbull. We draw a radius of 50 miles around a city. All the
equipment within that radius will be serviced out of that one center. You can get anywhere
in that radius in 2 hours or less. We have 140 service cities where 85% of the activity
is.
For areas outside a service city, TAMS service engineers extend the radius to 100 or
even 150 miles. In those cases, says Turnbull, the customer is billed less for a
maintenance contract since repairs and maintenance take more travel time. There
isnt a piece of equipment out there that does not have a service engineer assigned
to it, says Turnbull.
Beyond establishing service cities, TAMS tries to handle as many scanner problems as it
can over the phone with a solution center where experts field calls from customers.
What we have found is that 35% to 40% of all service calls can be resolved over the
phone, says Turnbull. An example would be software applications. The customer
will say I was doing this yesterday and I cant do it today. The service
engineer will talk them through a procedure that gets that customer back on line.
For Your Eyes Only
Service engineers have another time-consuming job: interfacing with the
technicians and radiologists whose machines they work on. What seems to be a scanner
problem sometimes isnt that at all.
Providence Healths Cunningham recalls a complaint from a radiologist that the
images from a CT were not as sharp and clear as they had been. Cunningham could find
nothing wrong with the machine. It turned out that the view box where the radiologist was
interpreting needed new lights. I wasnt going to tell him that,
Cunningham says, but after the lights were changed he said the CT images looked a
lot better.
Actually, problems of individual eyesight are more common than might be thought.
Image quality is in the eye of the beholder, says TAMS Turnbull.
The image can change or the persons eyes can change. We have come to realize
that maybe the interpreters eyes have changed. In that case you get all the readers
together and you get them to agree the image is the proper one. You put that image
snapshot in your file and then if needed you bring it back to compare.
Turnbull estimates that only 40% of a technicians job time is actually spent on
technical tasks and that the rest is spent managing the customer. And that
includes dealing with eyesight differences.
The company that comes up with a machine that can conform to the images that
different readers like has got itself a gold mine, Turnbull says. Its
almost cost prohibitive today.
George Wiley is a contributing writer for 24x7.