Enjoy your moment smartwatches, it may be briefer than you think
Especially useful for treating brain cancer and aneurysms
From the November issue of HCB News magazine
Chronic pain costs the U.S. $635 billion per year
Shown to be 96 percent accurate
Only imaging device approved to diagnose early liver disease
Will provide access to 3T MR and MR-guided focused ultrasound
How will this impact physicians' treatment decisions?
Bringing “smart hospitals” to life
Clinical decision support systems need to be modified
From the November issue of HCB News magazine
Speed and ease of use meet XR-29 compliance
Holds promise in treating brain tumors, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and more
Proposed six percent cuts could have shut down many freestanding clinics
U.S. closer to a domestic commercial supply of the SPECT workhorse isotope
Upgrading your radiography equipment is a major undertaking - but it's worth it
Over 400 retail medical clinics will be upgraded
Faster acquisition may allow for 100 more scans annually
Over two-thirds of U.S. adults are overweight or obese
The future of CR and DR detectors
Acquisition includes $156.3 million in debt and the promise of new investments
Part of strategic vision for greater U.S. presence
Funding will more than triple the number of PET/MR systems in UK
But... do they actually use them?
A 'breakthrough' in merging neurosurgical robotics and intraoperative imaging
Over 70 percent of people surveyed would let doctors see postings
Range of potential from skin conditions to heart failure
Active surveillance surprisingly inexpensive
Will begin with CT algorithm to assess risk of Osteoporosis
New drug candidates are showing promise
Will pursue further strategic opportunities with VHA-UHC Alliance
He sees “great untapped potential” in IMRIS technology
Could have future implications for chemotherapy
A conversation with CEO Stephen Spotts
“Ugh, having an MRI is like being inside a pissed-off fax machine!”
Molecular breast imaging gets its first set of wheels
Clinical trials illustrate viable alternative to open skull surgery
People, conversely, are “notoriously bad” at it
Another salvo has been fired in the ongoing debate about routine mammography screening