Screening

Diagnostic screening programs help catch cancer, abnormalities or other diseases before they reach an advanced stage, saving lives and healthcare costs. Screening programs include, lung, breast, prostate, and cervical cancer, among many others.

MRI-guided laser ablation precisely targets prostate tumors

A new MRI-guided intervention has proven safe and efficacious in men with prostate cancer, according to a study published in the Journal of Urology and publicized by UCLA Health June 10. 

June 10, 2016

Facebook reaches younger patients who stand to benefit by early treatment of inflammatory back pain

Facebook advertising can help speed patients with inflammatory back pain (IBP) toward appropriate diagnostic procedures—including imaging with MRI rather than x-ray and observation by a rheumatology specialist rather than a primary-care doc—as well as toward proper treatment. 

June 10, 2016

Diagnostic radiology educators aren’t using advanced simulation techniques, but they may soon change their tune

Radiology residency programs are barely using high-fidelity simulation training at all right now, but watch for the technology to begin changing the educational landscape for diagnostic rads-to-be in the years to come.

June 1, 2016

Nancy M. Cappello on the transformative power of social media

Nancy M. Cappello, PhD, director and founder of Are You Dense and Are You Dense Advocacy, wrote a new post for The Huffington Post about the role social media has played in her own life and the role it plays in the lives of women from all over the world. She said the internet and social media have “transformed our lives,” opening “a global connection to those with similar interests and passions.” 

June 1, 2016

New PET agent to detect prostate cancer gets FDA OK

The U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) approved a new radioactive diagnostic agent for use in PET imaging to identify suspected sites of prostate cancer.

June 1, 2016

Study finds more stroke imaging for African-Americans, men and younger patients than for other subpopulations

Patients presenting with stroke symptoms have a better chance of receiving advanced neuroimaging if they are male, under 55 or African-American than do patients in none of those demographics, according to a study presented May 25 at the American Society of Neuroradiology’s annual meeting in Washington, D.C.

May 25, 2016

Better radiotherapy achieved in breast-cancer patients trained to hold their breath

Breast-cancer patients can learn how to hold their breath for more than five minutes in order to receive radiation therapy while motionless, which can lead to shorter treatments, lower overall doses, better tumor targeting and less destruction of healthy tissue.

May 24, 2016
Clinical Collaboration Platform 2

Carestream Demonstrates Support for Clinical Collaboration Workflows at 2016 SIIM Conference

ROCHESTER, N.Y., May 24 — Carestream will demonstrate its ability to support   deconstructed and unified enterprise imaging platforms at the 2016 SIIM (Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine) conference being held June 29-July 1 in Portland. Carestream’s standards-based, modular platform offers interoperability that allows users to choose one or multiple modules to satisfy their enterprise imaging needs. 

May 24, 2016

Around the web

Automated AI-generated measurements combined with annotated CT images can improve treatment planning and help referring physicians and patients better understand their disease, explained Sarah Jane Rinehart, MD, director of cardiac imaging with Charleston Area Medical Center.

Two advanced algorithms—one for CAC scores and another for segmenting cardiac chamber volumes—outperformed radiologists when assessing low-dose chest CT scans. 

"Gen AI can help tackle repetitive tasks and provide insights into massive datasets, saving valuable time," Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud, said Tuesday. 

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