In a major leap for India’s healthcare innovation, All India Institute of Medical Sciences has introduced the Hyperfine Swoop System, marking the country’s first use of a portable MRI for bedside brain imaging. This breakthrough allows doctors to perform critical brain scans directly at the patient’s location without the need to shift them to a traditional MRI facility.
Developed by US-based Hyperfine, the Swoop system is an ultra low field, compact MRI device that can be wheeled into ICUs, emergency rooms, and neurosurgical wards. Unlike conventional MRI machines that require specialized infrastructure and patient transport, this system eliminates logistical barriers, enabling faster and safer diagnostics especially for critically ill patients.
The technology is expected to have a significant impact across multiple clinical areas, including stroke management, trauma care, ICU monitoring, pediatric imaging, and post surgical neurological assessments. For patients who are too unstable to be moved, bedside imaging can be life saving by enabling immediate diagnosis and timely intervention.
AIIMS, which handles a large volume of stroke and critical care cases every year, stands to benefit immensely from this innovation. Traditionally, transporting such patients to MRI rooms posed risks and delays. With the Swoop system, clinicians can now capture diagnostic images instantly at the point of care, improving decision making speed and patient outcomes.
Beyond clinical use, the deployment is also expected to boost research and evidence generation in portable MRI applications. As one of India’s leading medical institutions, AIIMS will play a key role in studying and expanding the use of this technology across the country.
The introduction of portable MRI aligns with a broader global shift toward point of care diagnostics bringing advanced medical technology closer to patients and making healthcare faster, safer, and more accessible.
“Bedside brain imaging transforms how we care for critically ill patients… enabling faster decision-making in neurology and trauma.”
By
HB Team

