Erik L. Ridley[email protected]UltrasoundCEUS boosts differentiation of BI-RADS 4 lesionsContrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) can offer significant value in differentiating breast masses initially categorized as ultrasound BI-RADS category 4 by improving specificity, according to Chinese researchers who presented the study at this month's RSNA meeting in Chicago.December 22, 2009UltrasoundAuntMinnie.com Ultrasound InsiderDecember 17, 2009PACS/VNAIntegrating CAD with PACS adds clinical valueGiving radiologists access to computer-aided detection (CAD) technology directly on their PACS workstation software can boost the number of lung nodules detected on low-dose CT screening exams, according to research presented at the 2009 RSNA meeting in Chicago.December 17, 2009AIAuntMinnie.com Advanced Visualization InsiderDecember 13, 2009PACS/VNARegular calibration crucial for consumer LCDsOff-the-shelf LCD displays vary considerably in performance and require regular calibration to produce a suitable level of performance for clinical image review, according to research presented at the 2009 RSNA meeting in Chicago.December 13, 2009PACS/VNAAuntMinnie.com PACS InsiderDecember 8, 2009CTRadiologists may not always comply with Fleischner guidelinesCHICAGO - The vast majority of radiologists appear to understand the Fleischner Society's guidelines on management of small pulmonary nodules incidentally detected on routine chest CT scans. But that knowledge may not necessarily translate into actual conformance, according to research presented Wednesday at the RSNA meeting in Chicago.December 2, 2009PACS/VNACompression ratio not the best quality indicator for lossy imagesCHICAGO - There may be a better way to judge the quality of a lossy-compressed JPEG 2000 image than its traditional compression ratio, according to research presented Thursday at the 2009 RSNA meeting in Chicago.December 2, 2009AIChest x-ray CAD fails to boost observer performanceCHICAGO - Computer-aided detection (CAD) software may not produce significant improvement in detecting suspicious lesions on chest radiographs, but it's not necessarily the technology's fault, according to research presented Wednesday at the 2009 RSNA meeting in Chicago.December 1, 2009IS'Send-to-editor' speech recognition function boosts radiologist productivityCHICAGO - Speech recognition is often maligned as a technology that improves radiology report turnaround time at the expense of reduced radiologist efficiency and satisfaction. But a research team has found that radiologists who occasionally send reports to editors for transcription are significantly more productive.November 30, 2009Previous PagePage 251 of 393Next PageTop StoriesCTUsing GPT‑4o with CT exams helps diagnose ovarian cancer earlierEarly detection of ovarian cancer is a persistent challenge, with more than half still diagnosed at metastatic stages.Womens ImagingSurvey: Nearly 4 out of 5 practices short on breast imagersRadiation Oncology/TherapyPooled evidence: Lu-177 PSMA-617 vs. established therapies in mCRPCMRICardiac MRI-based ML model predicts MACE risk for STEMI patientsSponsor ContentHow Agentic AI Is Transforming Radiology Ops