Clinical News
Informatics
Industry News
Medical, Legal, And Practice
Education
Subspecialties
More
Sign In
CT
Digital X-Ray
Interventional
Molecular Imaging
MRI
Radiation Oncology/Therapy
Ultrasound
Womens Imaging
MRI: Page 195
Serbia 'comes home' as its contribution gets official recognition
By
Frances Rylands-Monk
VIENNA - Serbian radiologists have warmly welcomed the chance for greater visibility at the ECR and in European radiology at large -- visibility which until recently has been lacking, despite the country's scientific contribution to the discipline. Saturday's "ESR meets Serbia" session brought Serbian radiology into sharper focus.
March 9, 2014
Teeth: The feature radiologists need to know more about
By
Rebekah Moan
VIENNA - Most radiologists don't deal much with dental imaging, but they should be aware of what to look out for and know the difference between dental MRI and cone-beam CT, according to a Sunday presentation at ECR 2014.
March 9, 2014
Population-based whole-body MRI finds serious disease
By
Eric Barnes
VIENNA - Whole-body MRI screening is safe and accurate for detecting serious pathology in the asymptomatic general population -- especially in patients older than 50, according to a study presented on Sunday at ECR 2014. A few findings were more prevalent than expected in individuals younger than 50.
March 9, 2014
Experts chew the fat on obesity, services for larger patients
By
Frances Rylands-Monk
VIENNA - Ground-breaking applications of functional imaging techniques can help radiologists play their part in the fight against the emerging obesity pandemic. In particular, MR elastography is showing promise in the early detection of disease, attendees were told at Saturday's State-of-the-Art Symposium at ECR 2014.
March 8, 2014
Tread cautiously with MR-guided prostate biopsies
By
Philip Ward
VIENNA - MR-guided biopsies of the prostate should only be performed in select patients, and it's vital to keep aware of false-negative results. Also, an urgent need exists for robust multicenter trials of targeted biopsies of the prostate, ECR 2014 delegates learned during a Special Focus session on Saturday.
March 8, 2014
Multimodality vendors launch scanners at ECR 2014
By
Brian Casey
VIENNA - In the past, ECR languished in the shadow of Chicago's RSNA show when it came to new product introductions. But ECR is slowly coming into its own, as indicated by new product launches from the major multimodality companies at this week's congress.
March 8, 2014
MRI reveals the human connectome
By
Mélisande Rouger
VIENNA - Researchers are now better able to understand how brain neurons connect with one another and how disease affects these connections. Maps of neural connections from MRI are vital to this task. A dedicated New Horizons session covered this fascinating topic on Friday at ECR 2014.
March 7, 2014
MRI ensures no more stabbing in the dark over wound length
By
Frances Rylands-Monk
VIENNA - A ground-breaking study examining the reliability of MRI to image experimentally produced stab wounds in amputated human limbs was presented for the first time on Thurday at ECR 2014. The study findings may help with forensic evidence in criminal cases and with postmortem reports.
March 6, 2014
Bracco highlights MultiHance results, launches MDCT protocol software
By
AuntMinnieEurope.com staff writers
Bracco Imaging is highlighting new data on the use of gadobenate dimeglumine for breast MRI at ECR 2014 in Vienna, and has also launched a new tailored protocol software package for MDCT.
March 5, 2014
7T MRI may improve diagnosis of Parkinson's disease
By
Wayne Forrest
Researchers in Italy used 7-tesla MRI to uncover details of an area in the brain linked to Parkinson's disease, which could help improve early detection of the condition, according to a study published online 26 February in
Radiology
.
March 5, 2014
Why we need less trash and more substantial papers
By
Dr. Peter Rinck, PhD
Who needs articles such as "Seven cases of ingrown toenails at 7-tesla?" There needs to be more substantial papers, more profound review articles, asserts the Maverinck in his latest column. A lot of what's published these days is motivated by money and that must change, he writes.
March 3, 2014
MRI tackles low-dose CT on lung cancer screening
By
Cynthia E. Keen
CT screening of high-risk individuals for lung cancer can identify malignant nodules sooner, but every CT scan performed, even at a low dose, confers a small risk of causing cancer as a result of cumulative radiation dose exposure. German researchers think MRI provides a viable alternative.
February 23, 2014
Previous Page
Page 195 of 266
Next Page