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MRI: Page 223
EVINCI: Noninvasive heart imaging cuts invasive procedures 75%
By
Eric Barnes
As many as three-fourths of patients with chest pain could avoid invasive and costly procedures like invasive coronary angiography by undergoing noninvasive imaging tests first, according to investigators at the Evaluation of Integrated Cardiac Imaging (EVINCI) Consortium last week.
July 2, 2012
Researchers find novel way to image women with breast implants
By
Rebekah Moan
Imaging women with silicone breast implants with diffusion-weighted MR imaging is a challenge, but a possible solution is to combine short-tau inversion recovery and slice-select gradient reversal to eliminate or reduce silicone signal, according to a study published online in
European Radiology
on 16 June.
July 1, 2012
MRI with gadolinium oxide particles finds more MS lesions
By
Wayne Forrest
The combination of gadolinium and ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide particles in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) reveals 51% more active lesions in MRI scans than gadolinium alone, French researchers report in the July issue of
Radiology
.
June 26, 2012
ContextVision collaborates with Karolinska
By
AuntMinnieEurope.com staff writers
Image enhancement developer ContextVision is partnering with the Karolinska Institute to develop new medical imaging tools.
June 25, 2012
Wait in line Usain Bolt; MRI's forgotten pioneer; breast tomo advances
By
Philip Ward
June 19, 2012
Diffusion-weighted MRI provides boost for breast lesion detection
By
Wayne Forrest
Diffusion-weighted MRI and apparent diffusion coefficient measurements help increase the specificity of breast MRI to more than 90% and provide faster imaging times in a noninvasive, nonionizing radiation way, concludes a new meta-analysis from France.
June 19, 2012
Olympics countdown: Staff training gets under way at polyclinic
By
Philip Ward
The elite squad of more than 100 volunteers charged with the task of imaging the 2012 Olympics met for the first time last week. Editor-in-Chief Philip Ward joined them in London for an exclusive tour of the new polyclinic facility.
June 19, 2012
Europe celebrates the forgotten pioneer of MRI: Dr. Erik Odeblad
By
Dr. Peter Rinck, PhD
Dr. Erik Odeblad, PhD, of Sweden was recently awarded the 2012 European Magnetic Resonance Award. In his latest column, the Maverinck highlights Odeblad's pioneering contributions to the application of magnetic resonance in medicine and biology.
June 18, 2012
European study shows strokes among younger patients often missed
By
Philip Ward
Strokes in younger people tend to be overlooked, or symptoms are being misinterpreted, Dr. Franz Fazekas, head of neurology at the Medical University of Graz in Austria, reported in a large-scale European study presented at this week's European Neurological Society meeting in Prague.
June 12, 2012
ESGAR: Take care not to overlook paraduodenal pancreatitis
By
Philip Ward
Insufficient attention is given to paraduodenal pancreatitis, a distinct form of chronic pancreatitis, occurring predominantly in and around the duodenum along the minor papilla, according to award-winning research from the European Society of Gastrointestinal and Abdominal Radiology (ESGAR) annual meeting in Edinburgh, U.K.
June 12, 2012
CT 'triples risk of leukemia & brain tumors'; ESR gets tough on plagiarism
By
Philip Ward
June 5, 2012
Indian MRI market looks set to remain strong
By
AuntMinnieEurope.com staff writers
The MRI market in India is expected to grow at a healthy rate in 2012 as the awareness for MRI tests increase and as technological advancements make MRI suitable for treating a wide variety of diseases, according to a new report published on 1 June by research firm Netscribes (India).
June 5, 2012
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