Feature | Brady D. Schultz

Any time a patient can be administered minimally invasive treatments percutaneously, have an increased chance at abridged recovery time and a reduced or eliminated hospital visit, it’s a step in the right direction. Efficiency is crucial, and interventional imaging is becoming more effective each year.

Time May 18, 2006
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Feature | Mary Beth Massat

With all the discussion surrounding the development of a national Electronic Health Record (EHR), perhaps nothing better ...

Time May 18, 2006
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Feature | Cristen Bolan

In President Bush’s last State of the Union address, he called for “most Americans to have an electronic health record ...

Time May 18, 2006
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Feature | Mary Beth Massat

The field of molecular imaging continues to grow. GE Healthcare has already invested $160 million in the development of ...

Time May 18, 2006
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Feature | Cristen Bolan

The tremendous accuracy with which a physician can treat tumors with Intensity-Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT) is the ...

Time May 18, 2006
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Feature | Maureen Leahy

Image fusion — combining image data from different modalities, and of which hybrid imaging is a subset — is ...

Time May 18, 2006
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Feature | Herman Oosterwijk MS, MBA

On a recent road trip to Arizona in my RV, I noticed that the dashboard indicator for the engine temperature did not ...

Time May 18, 2006
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Case Study

As clinical director of Breast MRI of Oklahoma LLC and radiologic director of Mercy Women’s Center, Rebecca G. Stough, M ...

Time May 17, 2006
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Feature | Cristen Bolan

Knowledge is power. And patients are acquiring that power. An informed patient today might ask a physician before undergoing an exam, “Does your MRI have 3-D imaging support?” Or simply, “Is the equipment safe?”

Time May 17, 2006
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Feature | Cristen Bolan

Imaging technology has advanced by leaps and bounds in the last few years with enhancements in multimodality imaging ...

Time May 17, 2006
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Case Study

The Customer The General and Diagnostic Imaging Center and Mary Birch Women’s Outpatient Imaging Center at the Sharp ...

Time May 17, 2006
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Feature | Nadim Daher

The market for PACS implementation services was earmarked to reach $273 million in 2005, representing more than twenty ...

Time May 17, 2006
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Feature | Mary Beth Massat

Radiology information technology (IT) such as PACS, RIS, clinical applications and digital dictation/speech recognition is creating new opportunities for radiology services, both inpatient and outpatient.

Time May 17, 2006
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Feature | Paul T. Gihring, B.S., P.E.

Nuclear medicine (NM) was one of the first imaging modalities to offer all-digital acquisition and processing, achieve ...

Time May 17, 2006
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Feature | Cristen Bolan

Image fusion of molecular and anatomic data has proven extremely useful for diagnosis and treatment in radiology ...

Time May 17, 2006
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Technology

MVision, from Siemens Medical Solutions, is a volumetric in-line target imaging solution and the natural next step in ...

Time May 14, 2006
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Feature

CT multislice modalities have turned up the volume of the already dense stacks of reports radiologists must thoroughly ...

Time May 14, 2006
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Technology

The ImageGrid 200 establishes a new entry-level DICOM-standard storage category by combining an enterprise-class ...

Time May 14, 2006
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Feature | Brady D. Schultz

When Claude Bernard inserted a mercury thermometer into the carotid artery of a horse to measure blood temperature in ...

Time May 14, 2006
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Technology

Toshiba’s high-performance Excelart Vantage ZGV magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system received FDA clearance. The new Vantage ZGV is immediately available and offers new product sequences, enhanced image quality and features the Mach 8 processor, which increases reconstruction to 1,300 images per second for more powerful clinical applications.

Time May 14, 2006
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