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Subspecialties: Page 1369
CompuMed nets California prison contract
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Medical software developer CompuMed has been awarded a three-year statewide contract to provide electrocardiogram interpretation systems and services for the California Department of Corrections (CDC), according to the Los Angeles-based firm.
July 19, 2004
TeraRecon signs luminary site
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Three-dimensional-software developer TeraRecon and Kansas Spine Hospital in Wichita, KS, have entered into a luminary site agreement.
July 19, 2004
Tongue and shriek: Piercing makes for unique imaging challenges
By
Shalmali Pal
A tongue piercing gone awry is not a pretty sight. Common complications include pain, edema, and prolonged bleeding. Imaging isn't always required to assess these patients, but it can prove pivotal in instances where the problem has spread beyond the lingua.
July 18, 2004
VC and gastroenterology: friends in need?
By
Eric Barnes
Gastroenterologists lack the resources to screen a burgeoning population of eligible fiftysomethings for colorectal cancer, making virtual colonoscopy a logical adjunct, according to Dr. John Bond, chief of gastroenterology at the Minnesota VA Medical Center in Minneapolis. Even if widespread conventional colonoscopy screening were feasible, he said, not all patients would choose it.
July 15, 2004
ProSolv gets CE Mark
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Cardiology digital imaging and reporting software developer Problem Solving Concepts (ProSolv) of Indianapolis said that it has received the European Union's CE Mark for its ProSolv Cardiovascular product.
July 14, 2004
INDD inaugurates Amadeus consortium
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
The Institute for Neurodegenerative Disorders (INDD) launched the Amadeus consortium (American and European Union SPECT Imaging Consortium) at a June investigators meeting in Florence, Italy.
July 14, 2004
Kodak technology to be used at Olympics
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Eastman Kodak Health Imaging will provide a number of its imaging technologies for use at next month's Olympic Games in Athens. The Rochester, NY-based vendor will be installing a PACS and RIS network at the Polyclinic, the primary medical center for the Olympics.
July 13, 2004
California rads nail diagnosis with CT and x-ray
By
Brian Casey
If you've been in radiology long enough, chances are you've seen your share of strange cases. But radiologists at a Southern California hospital got a doozy in April, when a construction worker presented with obvious head injuries but no visible sign of their cause.
July 13, 2004
CompuMed selects Schiller for ECG platform
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Medical software developer CompuMed has selected Baar, Switzerland-based Schiller to provide a new server platform and terminals for its upgraded CardioGram remote electrocardiograph (ECG) product line, according to the Los Angeles-based firm.
July 12, 2004
PointDx adds to patent portfolio
By
AuntMinnie.com staff writers
Medical software developer PointDx has received an additional notice of allowance for its U.S. patent application 09/635,515, entitled "Method and Computer-Implemented Procedure for Creating Electronic, Multimedia Reports."
July 12, 2004
Nailed in the head: X-ray, CT show patient's good luck
By
Tracie L. Thompson
When the patient arrived at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Mission Hills, CA, it was clear he'd need more than an x-ray. Plain films were able to answer an immediate question: How many nails had been driven into his head? His physicians then turned to 3D CT images to gauge the extent of the injury and guide treatment.
July 12, 2004
AuntMinnie.com Virtual Colonoscopy Radiology Insider
By
Eric Barnes
Will radiologists and gastroenterologists ever see eye to eye on virtual colonoscopy? Discourse between the two specialties hasn't always been positive. And while gastroenterologists have questioned the accuracy of the virtual exam, radiologists often note that the worst virtual colonoscopy results can be found in gastroenterologist-led studies.
July 11, 2004
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