Theory time. I was reading this article about how John Hopkins researchers discovered a way to inject sugar into patients so that the MRI could detect the cancers that are feeding off of it.
http://www.medicalne...cles/262999.php
Part of the difficulty with diseases is determination. I was just thinking how come our MRI scanners currently can't get to that fine level of detail? Identifying each one of our cells including position, type, age, size and density. Every last one even in the eyes, teeth and hair. It could separate cells that should be in the body vs cells that shouldn't such as viruses, cancer, mold and bacteria. We already have the profiles of thousands of pathogens, can't we feed them to an AI? We have AI that can sort through hundreds of medical texts already.
With an intelligent AI our super MRI could use heuristic programming to sort and categorize through the trillions of cells it picks up through raw electron shifts.
What is the limitation? Computational time? Is it actual scan resolution? Are our computers not sophisticated enough to count the stars in the sky? Can someone illuminate on the progress of this technology?