Jump to content
  • articles
    9,848
  • comments
    83
  • views
    12,469,694

Contributors to this article

About this News

Articles in the news

Full-body scans of 100,000 people could change way diseases are detected and treated

Scientists expect to gain unprecedented insights into human ageing and the earliest signs of disease after scanning 100,000 people from head to toe in the world’s largest whole body imaging project.

The completion of the decade-long task means qualifying researchers worldwide will have access to 1bn de-identified images of the hearts, brains, abdomens, blood vessels, bones and joints of volunteers alongside medical histories and rich data on their genetic makeup, health and lifestyle.

Subsets of the images compiled by UK Biobank, which follows the health of half a million people in Britain, have already underpinned breakthroughs in how the heart influences psychiatric disorders and shown that the scans can predict dozens of future diseases. They also suggest no amount of alcohol consumption is healthy.

“Researchers now have an incredible window into the body,” said Naomi Allen, the chief scientist at UK Biobank. “For the first time, researchers can study how we age and how diseases develop in stunning detail and at a massive scale.”

“We hope that the findings … will change the way the world detects and treats disease before people get sick,” she added.

UK Biobank is now re-scanning 60,000 volunteers to see how people’s brains, bodies and bones change in the years after their first scan. Louise Thomas, a professor of metabolic imaging at the University of Westminster, has looked at body scans taken two years apart. “The results were shocking. The amount of visceral fat, the bad fat in the abdomen, had increased,” she said. Muscle also becomes more fatty. “As we get older, we become more and more marbled,” she said. “We’re becoming wagyu beef.”

Medical advances made from the images are expected to transform procedures in the NHS. One of Thomas’s colleagues automated the detection of aneurysms – life-threatening bulges in blood vessel walls. While men are already screened for them, women are not, even though they are more serious in women. “We can do lots of things we weren’t able to do before. It’s quite extraordinary,” Thomas added.

Read full story

Source: The Guardian, 15 July 2025

Read more
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.