Today’s radiology teams are faced with a wide range of growing complexities such as patient and procedure variabilities ...
AT A GLANCE Organization: Expert Radiology Management Services, LLC Specialty: Subspecialty teleradiology — neuro and ...
Radiology departments have many different needs and face a wide variety of challenges that can impact their departments ...
Despite decades of progress in breast imaging, one challenge continues to test even the most skilled radiologists ...
ViewRay's MRIdian System, the world's first and only magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-guided radiation therapy system, was featured during the 2015 annual meeting of the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM). This year's meeting was held July 12-16 in Anaheim, California.
To observe the brain in action, scientists and physicians use imaging techniques such as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to observe physiological modifications to the cerebral region of activated neurons. Until now, it was believed that these differences were only due to modifications of the blood influx towards the cells. By using intrinsic optical signals (IOS) imaging, researchers from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, demonstrated that, contrary to what was thought, another physiological variation is involved: the activated neurons swell due to the massive entry of water. This discovery provides evidence that a much finer analysis of the functioning of the brain - and of its dysfunctions - is possible. These results are published in the journal Cell Reports.
