AuntMinnieEurope.com staff writersClinical NewsSiemens fills Barts imaging orderSiemens Healthcare has installed 11 new imaging systems at St. Bartholomew's (Barts) Hospital's new Imaging and Diagnostics Department in the Barts Cancer Centre.August 9, 2010Clinical NewsEC addresses isotope shortageThe European Commission (EC) has sent to the European Parliament a series of recommendations designed to address the global medical isotope shortage and prevent unnecessary radiation exposure for CT and radiation therapy patients.August 8, 2010Clinical NewsElekta gets CE Mark for iViewCSwedish radiation oncology firm Elekta has received the European CE Mark for its iViewC digital patient position verification system.August 4, 2010Clinical NewsVarian expands consulting servicesRadiation therapy firm Varian Medical Systems is now also offering its clinical consulting services to customers in Europe and Australasia.August 3, 2010Clinical NewsCarestream completes DRX installCarestream Health has installed a Carestream DRX-Evolution dual-detector digital radiography (DR) room in the accident and emergency department at Worthing Hospital in West Sussex, U.K.August 2, 2010Clinical NewsItalray nets 2 DRF ordersItalian x-ray vendor Italray has received two orders for its Clinodigit Omega DRF system.August 2, 2010Clinical NewsIBA to build proton center in PolandRadiopharmaceutical firm Ion Beam Applications has won a contract to build a proton therapy center in Krakow, Poland.August 1, 2010Clinical NewsAcuitas Medical secures investmentMRI software company Acuitas Medical has secured funding of 700,000 euros ($900,000 U.S.) from two sources to further develop its MR-based fine texture analysis technology for the early diagnosis and management of cancer, organ fibrosis, and other diseases.July 29, 2010Clinical NewsSiemens sees rebound in Q3 resultsGerman industrial conglomerate Siemens AG announced positive results for its Siemens Healthcare business in its fiscal 2010 third quarter.July 28, 2010Clinical NewsGE settles oil-for-food charges with SECGE Healthcare has agreed to pay a $23.4 million settlement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to settle charges that GE-related companies violated the rules of the United Nations oil-for-food program in Iraq earlier in the decade.July 26, 2010Previous PagePage 820 of 934Next PageTop StoriesMRIChatGPT gathers momentum in MR imagingChatGPT-4 can enhance clinical workflow by recommending case-specific MRI protocols, optimizing protocol selection, and leading to relevant acquisition time savings, a new German-led study has found.CTLow-dose CT ties emphysema to mortality in previous smokersMRIKeep calm: Booklets aim to conquer children's anxietyMedical, Legal, and PracticeScientific freedom requires vigilance, warns HammSponsor Content"Join Us"