Brian Casey[email protected]Nuclear MedicineAMI study shows PET/CT's effect on patient careMarch 30, 2004InterventionalOb/gyn fires broadside over control of UAEMarch 24, 2004MRITurf concerns derail extremity MRI accreditationMarch 23, 2004Clinical NewsHealthcare payors take aim at imaging againIs history repeating itself? Signs are that U.S. healthcare payors, concerned over rising costs, are once again targeting medical imaging procedures like CT and MRI.March 18, 2004BreastResearchers tackle false-positives in CADComputer-aided detection (CAD) is a promising technology that is changing the way many breast imaging facilities interpret mammograms. But CAD still needs some fine-tuning, in particular to address a high false-positive rate that leaves mammographers relying heavily on biopsy to determine whether CAD-flagged areas really are malignant.March 16, 2004CTMSCT beats x-ray in diagnosing TKA osteolysisSAN FRANCISCO - These days, it seems that just about everything is better with multislice CT. In orthopedic imaging, multislice CT is proving more effective than conventional radiography in finding lesions caused by osteolysis that result as a complication of total knee arthroscopy, according to a presentation Friday at the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) meeting.March 14, 2004Clinical NewsAuntMinnieIndia's IRIA Conference ReporterWelcome to the inaugural edition of AuntMinnie’s IRIA Conference Reporter! We’re pleased to bring you this overview of the Indian Radiological and Imaging Association meeting, held in Hyderabad 8-11 January, 2004.March 11, 2004Clinical NewsFantastic voyage takes capsule endoscopy to IndiaOne of the latest trends in gastrointestinal imaging is like a scene from the 1966 sci-fi movie Fantastic Voyage: Patients swallow a small capsule outfitted with a miniature camera that snaps pictures as it passes through the small bowel. From its origins in Israel, capsule endoscopy has made the passage to India, where researchers at a Hyderabad hospital are putting it through its paces.March 11, 2004CTLTMG group explores virtual colonoscopy for TBIn western countries, virtual colonoscopy has piqued interest as a means of detecting colon cancer less invasively than endoscopy-based methods such as colonoscopy. It could play that role as well in India, but VC could also have other applications, such as the detection of tuberculosis, according to a group from LTMG Hospital and Medical College in Mumbai.March 11, 2004UltrasoundUltrasound may offer earlier typhoid detectionTyphoid fever is endemic in India, being the fifth most common infectious disease in the country. Ultrasound could fill a diagnosis gap and assume a role in the early detection of typhoid, according to results presented by Hyderabad researchers at the IRIA show.March 11, 2004Previous PagePage 161 of 190Next PageTop StoriesAIU.S. FDA may need to clarify SaMD validation standardsIn a video interview, a Dana-Farber Cancer Institute expert describes what the "rigor spectrum" is in validation study designs.Molecular ImagingPSMA-PET/CT may replace NaF-PET/CT in advanced prostate cancerWomens ImagingPreop breast MRI improves surgical planning, but use disparities remainWomens ImagingFIGO classification from MRI leads to moderate agreement among radsSponsor ContentRegister Now: Breaking Barriers in Breast Imaging Webinar