Rebekah Moan[email protected]Musculoskeletal RadiologyMRI may not be needed to diagnose skier's thumb in ERSkier's thumb can be diagnosed based solely on clinical findings by residents in the emergency room (ER) when instructed correctly. Additional imaging such as MRI should only be employed in cases when the physical exam remains inconclusive, according to research from the Netherlands published on 21 July in the European Journal of Radiology.August 4, 2016Womens ImagingAuntMinnieEurope.com Women's Imaging InsiderAugust 1, 2016Clinical NewsMRI + BI-RADS: A winning combinationUsing BI-RADS to detect ductal carcinoma in situ with MRI results in higher sensitivity and positive predictive value than mammography, according to new Brazilian research published in the European Journal of Radiology.August 1, 2016Womens ImagingWom insiderAugust 1, 2016Clinical NewsJury still out on MRI for cervical spine patientsTo use MRI or not to use MRI for cervical spine clearance after blunt traumatic injury? That is the question -- and remains so, according to a study published in European Radiology. Researchers found "significant heterogeneity" in the literature around MRI's use, and they emphasize that more research is needed.July 21, 2016Musculoskeletal RadiologyUse MRI for athletes' acute groin pain, study findsAs the Rio Olympics loom large, imaging of athletes is on the mind. A new study finds an MRI-based assessment approach for acute groin injuries shows good intra- and interrater reproducibility and may help improve clinician's confidence in scoring of these injuries.July 14, 2016Clinical NewsPhoton-counting breast CT measures upBreast CT with a prototype photon-counting scanner offers higher resolution than what's been reported for other types of breast imaging technologies, according to a new specimen imaging study by Willi Kalender, PhD. Another advantage of photon-counting CT is its efficient use of radiation.July 6, 2016Womens ImagingAuntMinnieEurope.com Women's Imaging InsiderJune 15, 2016Clinical NewsSwedes add ABUS to improve cancer detectionAdding 3D automated breast ultrasound (ABUS) to digital mammography in a screening setting significantly improves the invasive breast cancer detection rate in women with dense breasts and results in an acceptable recall increase, Swedish researchers have found.June 15, 2016Clinical NewsDutch reveal new data on recalls in breast screeningWhen transitioning from film-screen mammography to full-field digital mammography, going digital increases the number of repeated recalls for the same mammographic abnormality, found a large Dutch study published on 14 May in European Radiology.May 23, 2016Previous PagePage 16 of 45Next PageTop StoriesCTDL algorithm estimates lung nodule cancer risk, reduces false positivesThe deep-learning (DL) tool reduced false-positive results by almost 40% and showed high cancer detection rates.Molecular ImagingNeuroinflammation persists for 2 years in long COVIDMRIChatGPT gathers momentum in MR imagingCTLow-dose CT ties emphysema to mortality in previous smokersMRIKeep calm: Booklets aim to conquer children's anxiety