Frances Rylands-Monk[email protected]Clinical NewsHas the worm turned? Nano-CT can find outA multidisciplinary team from the Technical University of Munich has successfully tested a nano-CT device on a velvet worm and created 3D x-ray images at resolutions of up to 100 nanometers. The scanner promises much for virtual histological applications.December 12, 2017Clinical NewsGerman innovation supports structured data miningStructured reporting offers the prospect of speedier reporting throughput, but it also has major implications for epidemiology due to its capacity to store easily accessible data, notably numerical measurements, according to a German expert.December 7, 2017Organized Radiology IssuesReport: French x-ray units must brush up on doseNew analysis of national diagnostic reference levels (DRLs) has revealed staff in French x-ray departments tend to drag their heels when it comes to radiation protection, whereas CT professionals are increasingly on board in the DRL process.December 4, 2017AIEuSoMII: AI's on cusp of deployment in cancer screeningArtificial intelligence (AI) promises to transform radiological reading, and the imaging community must gear up for revolutionary diagnostic tools far removed from today's visual representations, a U.K. expert said at the European Society of Medical Imaging Informatics (EuSoMII) meeting.November 21, 2017AIEuSoMII: Radiologists, AI must share control of dataWhile Hollywood portrays dystopias in which artificial intelligence (AI) has rendered humans obsolete, the truth may not be quite as grim if imaging can harness the power of machine learning, according to research presented on 18 November at the European Society of Medical Imaging Informatics (EuSoMII) meeting in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.November 19, 2017Clinical NewsUltralow-dose CT probes presurgical stroke riskThe danger of stroke as a cardiac postsurgery complication has flagged the need for greater understanding of patients' calcified atherosclerotic burden prior to surgery. But just how much dose is needed for CT results to be accurate, and how can radiologists optimize visualization?November 7, 2017Clinical NewsPhotorealistic imaging bolsters knowledgeWith each new publication, the high quality of cinematic rendering and its power for lifelike visualization of medical images continues to impress the radiology community. But studies demonstrating its usefulness in the clinical environment now must play catchup, according to researchers.October 22, 2017Clinical NewsJFR 2017: CT overscanning leads to higher radiation dosesEfforts to curb radiation exposure with dose reduction technology have stepped up in recent years, but a study from Switzerland has revealed another source of excessive radiation dose across hospitals -- overscanning, delegates at the Journées Francophones de Radiologie (JFR 2017) heard on 16 October.October 15, 2017Clinical NewsJFR 2017: Choose the right MRI contrast to confirm leaksHypersignal seen outside the liver parenchyma on MRI scans after an injection of contrast for hepatobiliary studies is usually understood as a sign of biliary leak. But is it a good way to confirm injury after surgery? Maybe not, according to the researchers of a study to be presented on 14 October at the Journées Francophones de Radiologie (JFR 2017) congress.October 12, 2017Clinical NewsImaging in the crypt: Tales from Old London TownA global team of researchers has used imaging to help unlock the medical secrets of 18th and 19th century skeletons from a London crypt, shedding light on many conditions other than those detected by osteological analysis alone.October 10, 2017Previous PagePage 19 of 40Next PageTop StoriesMRI15 years of top stories: Which are the standouts?To mark the 15th anniversary of AuntMinnieEurope and the retirement of Editor-in-Chief Philip Ward, we present a list of the 15 all-time favorite articles.Molecular ImagingUnfilled vacancies and disparities persist in nuclear medicineMolecular ImagingPET develops key clinical role in neuroendocrine tumorsMolecular ImagingPET/CT visualizes complications in patients on hemodialysisCTAll roads lead to outsourcing