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Radiomics tool spots colon polyps before they evolve into cancer

colon colorectal cancer CTC

Colorectal cancer remains one of the top three causes of cancer-related death among men and women in industrialized regions, researchers explained in Radiology.

  • Read more about Radiomics tool spots colon polyps before they evolve into cancer

ACR ‘greatly pleased’ with the American Medical Association’s new payment policy leader

Ezequiel Silva III
Ezequiel Silva III, MD. Photo credit: American Medical Association.

Ezequiel Silva III, MD, a practicing San Antonio radiologist, will chair the 32-member AMA Multispecialty Relative Value Scale Update Committee.

  • Read more about ACR ‘greatly pleased’ with the American Medical Association’s new payment policy leader

Managing COVID-19 vaccine side effects: Harvard radiologists share their ‘pragmatic’ approach

Covid Vaccine

The method is based on the ACR's BI-RADS Atlas and aims to encourage vaccinations, limit patient anxiety and reduce unnecessary follow-up testing.

  • Read more about Managing COVID-19 vaccine side effects: Harvard radiologists share their ‘pragmatic’ approach

East Coast university scores $1.2M grant for cutting-edge biological imaging projects

The New York-based institution says the funds will help to develop a new light-sheet imaging device that will power a handful of cellular-level experiments.

  • Read more about East Coast university scores $1.2M grant for cutting-edge biological imaging projects

Politicians who break party lines elicit stronger brain responses, new imaging study reveals

Politics

Neuroimaging showed increased activity in two areas involved in cognitive function, researchers explained Monday.

  • Read more about Politicians who break party lines elicit stronger brain responses, new imaging study reveals

Deep learning detects common shoulder pain on x-rays—a potential safeguard for busy physicians

ai.png

The neural network performed well even when faced with low-quality images, German researchers reported in Skeletal Radiology.

  • Read more about Deep learning detects common shoulder pain on x-rays—a potential safeguard for busy physicians

‘We’re going in the wrong direction’: Race, income, education impeding women’s access to DBT

black woman breast cancer pink ribbon

Researchers analyzed 2.3 million exams performed over a seven-year period for their study, shared in JAMA Network Open.

  • Read more about ‘We’re going in the wrong direction’: Race, income, education impeding women’s access to DBT

More than 50% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 retain heart damage a month after discharge

New data from the American Heart Association (AHA), published Jan. 25, 2023, in Circulation, suggests it resulted in a significant increase in the number of patients dying from cardiovascular disease (CVD) and a higher age-adjusted mortality rate. Oxygen Mask

Each individual admitted to the ICU also had high levels of troponin, a protein released into the blood when the heart muscle sustains an injury, according to a new cardiac MRI-based study.

  • Read more about More than 50% of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 retain heart damage a month after discharge

‘Groundbreaking study’: AI helps providers with zero experience capture high-quality heart ultrasounds

Exams performed by nurses and trained sonographers were similar in more than 90% of cases, researchers explained in JAMA Cardiology.

  • Read more about ‘Groundbreaking study’: AI helps providers with zero experience capture high-quality heart ultrasounds

FDA-approved PET imaging agent predicts breast cancer patients’ response to new treatment

Oncology experts with the University of Washington in Seattle’s Cancer Research Center shared their findings in the Journal of Nuclear Medicine's February issue.

  • Read more about FDA-approved PET imaging agent predicts breast cancer patients’ response to new treatment

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