The newest DRYPRO 793 dry laser imager from Konica Minolta, specially designed for mammography applications, has proven itself a top performer for active radiology departments by providing improved resolution, workflow versatility and heightened efficiency.
The ORBIT PT automates the patient transport process by allowing one-nurse, one-button and no-lifting transfer of ...
Mayo Clinic has announced it has developed a series of MRI devices that make it easier to diagnose injuries and diseases ...
Radiology departments have many different needs and face a wide variety of challenges that can impact their departments ...
The notion of breast positioning has been turned upside down with the Horizon Prone Breastboard. Unlike other bulky ...
NeuroLogica Corp. has received the ETL product safety mark from Intertek Testing Serices, Inc., allowing entry of the ...
EIZO's RadiForce R23 is a 2MP 21.3-inch color TFT, dual-domain IPS LCD monitor with accurate display of color and ...
Despite decades of progress in breast imaging, one challenge continues to test even the most skilled radiologists ...
Welch Allyn has introduced a new aneroid to complete its line of sphygmomanometers featuring DuraShock technology, the ...
One of the key trends we noticed at RSNA 2005 was the increased emphasis on connectivity between imaging and information ...
Acclaimed stage and screen actor Avery Brooks playfully demanded to know “where are the flying cars” in that insurance ...
Bayer Radiology’s Barbara Ruhland and Thom Kinst discuss how radiology departments can address the many different ...
Just like the Intel chips that power PCs (and now finally Apple Macintoshes, too!), treatment planning software represents the engine that drives accuracy and effective functionality in radiation oncology equipment used to fight cancer. Consequently, it’s nearly impossible to dismiss the software’s importance and impact on cancer treatment delivery.
Picture archiving and communications systems (PACS) are capable of finally realizing the full potential of digital ...
Although healthcare budgets are tight, needs are expanding. Clinical facilities are continuously looking for ways to ...
eHealth Saskatchewan plays a vital role in providing IT services to patients, health care providers, and partners such ...
PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico, March 9, 2006 — The increasing role and mainstreaming of breast MRI in hospitals and breast ...
Where are the synergies of bringing together Elekta and IMPAC? The synergies are numerous, but all converge on our ...
Editor’s Note: Exploring IGRT is the result of a “virtual” roundtable discussion on image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT ...
We live and work in a fast-paced world struggling in overdrive to stay organized as we accumulate more intelligence and ...
What’s your perspective on the current reimbursement conundrum in which physicians find themselves? I think the ...
With all new technologies come new challenges. As imaging has evolved within the pathology domain from analog to digital, causing radiology and pathology imaging to crossover, the devices that generate the digital images pose several challenges.
It’s like a never-ending battle — that’s how Lena Napolitano, M.D., describes the recent and sharp rise in nosocomial ...
What’s so intriguing about extremity imaging that Hologic is delving into it with such intensity and passion? If you ...
May 23, 2006 