Contrast ultrasound has positive effect on practice
November 28th 2006Canadian and U.S. radiologists may face different regulatory restrictions when it comes to use of ultrasound contrast, but both agree on one thing: the agents have a positive effect on clinical practice, according to studies presented at the RSNA meeting on Monday.
Traveling around the world of radiology in just a few steps
November 28th 2006If you have been to RSNA in the last five years, you know that McCormick Place comprises three large convention buildings and that the meeting fills all three. Lectures and meetings are held in all three, with commercial exhibits in the north and south buildings and scientific exhibits confined to the East Lake building. Today I never left the East Lake building.
MSCT guidance bolsters orthopedic intervention
November 28th 2006Multislice CT allows accurate measurement, guidance, and assessment of several minimally invasive interventional procedures to fix pelvic, spinal, and other musculoskeletal lesions, according to studies from France and Germany presented at the RSNA meeting Monday.
Colon screening benefits from low-dose CT and new fly-through tool
November 28th 2006German researchers have found that low-dose 64-slice CT colonography accurately detects colorectal polyps in a screening population. They also tested a new 3D visualization tool that enables simultaneous antegrade and retrograde views, significantly decreasing interpretation time.
64-slice CTA bests SPECT in patients with coronary disease
November 28th 2006The era of 64-slice CT angiography as a tool to rule out cardiac catheterization in patients with an intermediate risk of coronary artery disease moved closer to reality at the RSNA meeting. A study confirming its superiority over dual-isotope SPECT for identifying CAD in these patients was reported in a Monday session.
Mammography utilization slows among Medicare patients
November 28th 2006Use of breast ultrasound and breast MRI in Medicare beneficiaries has been on the rise, but mammography utilization has not kept apace. Following a big boost in the number of mammograms in the late 1990s, growth has slowed in recent years. The reason could be waning awareness of screening programs or possibly a decline in access due to center closures.
Survey finds growing acceptance of 3D interpretation tools
November 27th 2006Three-D interpretation tools have rapidly found their way into the image review process but seamless integration with workstations remains a barrier to widespread adoption, according to a study presented at the RSNA meeting on Sunday.
Radiologists fending off telereading relearn the art of schmoozing
November 27th 2006You can tell a lot about current trends in radiology just by walking around the exhibit halls in McCormick Place. I can remember when some of the largest displays were film companies and x-ray tube producers. No more.