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Clinical News: Page 3256
Resting MCE may prove superior to SPECT for identifying myocardial viability
By
Jerry Ingram
NEW ORLEANS - Resting myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE), a new bedside procedure that can determine microvascular perfusion, might one day replace 99mTechnetium sestamibi SPECT for the diagnosis of myocardial viability following acute myocardial infarction, according to a poster presented today at the American College of Cardiology (ACC) meeting.
March 6, 2004
Radiologist reports initial impressions of 40-slice CT
By
Tracie L. Thompson
VIENNA - The CT world has been buzzing since the introduction of the next generation of multislice CT scanners at last year's RSNA meeting. Attendees at the European Congress of Radiology got a sneak peak at the capabilities of these new machines.
March 6, 2004
Ultrasound aces search for ureteral stones
By
Eric Barnes
VIENNA - Ultrasound is considered to be a rather challenging modality for detecting ureteral stones, but it worked like a charm for Drs. Jongmin Kim and S. H. Kim from the Jinju Gospel Hospital in Jinju, South Korea. Ultrasound left no stone unfound in the team’s eight-month study of emergency-room patients, as confirmed in follow-up imaging studies and clinical interventions.
March 6, 2004
MDCT reliably gauges vascular infiltration in pancreatic cancer
By
Eric Barnes
VIENNA - Radiologists at the University of Pisa in Italy have found high-resolution MDCT to be a reliable predictor of the degree of vascular infiltration in pancreatic cancer, light years ahead of what single-slice exams once produced, and comparable to US-guided laparoscopy.
March 5, 2004
New MR approach quantifies brain metabolite concentrations
By
Tracie L. Thompson
VIENNA - Chinese researchers have developed a method to quantitatively measure concentrations of brain metabolites using a position resolved spectroscopy sequence (PRESS) in MRI, according to a presentation Saturday at the European Congress of Radiology.
March 5, 2004
Italian hospital finds that PACS doubles costs
By
Tracie L. Thompson
VIENNA - When the radiology department at City Hospital in Legnano, Italy made the move to PACS, it took on a lot of additional costs as well, according to a candid description presented Friday at the European Congress of Radiology.
March 4, 2004
Cedara signs Aloka
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Imaging software developer Cedara Software has signed an agreement to supply medical imaging technologies and services to ultrasound vendor Aloka of Wallingford, CT.
March 4, 2004
New fusion method joins MR and CT in prostate cancer therapy planning
By
Eric Barnes
VIENNA - CT and MRI, both anatomical and functional, can be combined to improve the targeting of radiation therapy of the prostate, according to researchers from the University of Nijmegen in the Netherlands. At today’s prostate imaging sessions of the European Congress of Radiology, Jorn van Dalen, Ph.D. presented a study utilizing the novel coregistration method the group created.
March 4, 2004
Matrox to spotlight display controllers, partnerships at ECR
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Imaging graphics card developer Matrox Graphics of Montreal will be showcasing its latest line of medical display controllers, the Matrox RAD series, at the European Congress of Radiology (ECR) in Vienna, Austria.
March 4, 2004
Lung nodule analysis makes progress, not perfection
By
Eric Barnes
Researchers at the 2003 RSNA meeting examined CT lung imaging beyond the issue of nodule detection, i.e., nodule tracking, analysis, and follow-up using both automated and manual tools. These tasks are far more challenging than detection, of course, so automation's benefits to date are less convincing. Still, important progress is being made.
March 4, 2004
Cardiologist says ECGs should replace chest films for catheter placements
By
Tracie L. Thompson
A recent opinion piece in
Chest
, the journal of the American College of Chest Physicians, argues that ECGs would be faster, easier, and more appropriate than radiographs in most cases. But the author is also quick to acknowledge the unlikelihood of a sea change in this area of American medical practice.
March 4, 2004
BMJ article calls for "radiological driving licenses"
By
Brian Casey
An Italian cardiologist has published an opinion article in the
British Medical Journal
stating that physicians and patients do not know enough about the risks of radiological procedures, and that doctors should be required to have "radiological driving licenses" with penalties given for ordering inappropriate exams.
March 3, 2004
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