A classically trained physicist, Professor Sir Peter Mansfield had immersed himself in the field of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) for over a decade before his first paper on the topic of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) was published in the Journal of Physics: C in November 1973.
He had realised . He developed a safe and non-invasive technique to create images of soft tissue and organs in a 'slice' of the human body in spectacular detail, revolutionising medical diagnosis and changing how the human brain is studied.
This research was the start of the development of MRI, which has since changed the face of modern medicine, enabling doctors to see detailed images of the interior of the living body without the potentially harmful effects of radiation or surgery.
It culminated in Sir Peter receiving the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine alongside esteemed chemist Paul Lauterbur in 2003, for his work at Nottingham developing MRI.
MRI can now detect in great detail the presence of cancer and signs of damage in the body’s bones, tissues and organs. Today, MRI scanners are used in hospitals all over the world and over 60 million investigations with MRI are carried out every year.