CIVCO Medical Solutions is introducing a newly re-designed bracket compatible with the S317 transducers on the GE Healthcare LOGIQ 500 and LOGIQ 200 ultrasound systems. The bracket offers a more secure fit onto the transducer, providing added safety and accuracy for the imaging professional. The multiangle bracket has biopsy depths of 4, 6 and 8 cm.
The 30-inch wide Action G2 Bariatric Pad is tested clinically effective to 500 pounds. The Shear Smart surface of Akton ...
The Compu•cutter III is less than half the size of its predecessor without sacrificing quality and accuracy. It is ...
AT A GLANCE Organization: Expert Radiology Management Services, LLC Specialty: Subspecialty teleradiology — neuro and ...
The NovaPACS OR Viewer from NovaRad Corp. allows physicians to compare old and new images side by side and view images ...
The CONDOR Control System for Operating Rooms is a surgical command center that puts medical staff in control of the ...
Eclipse radiotherapy treatment planning software speeds up the process of planning complex radiotherapy treatments. It ...
Radiology departments have many different needs and face a wide variety of challenges that can impact their departments ...
The ME511L 5 megapixel LCD is now FDA 510k approved for use in all digital mammography applications. Totoku’s ME511L is ...
Anyone who remembers – or for that matter, still uses – single-slice CT scanners can appreciate the dramatic ...
All hospitals today face challenges, but none comes close to matching the recent experiences of Louisiana hospitals ...
Despite decades of progress in breast imaging, one challenge continues to test even the most skilled radiologists ...
One of the most prominent figures in nuclear medicine in the last half-century is Dr. Henry Wagner of Johns Hopkins ...
It is no surprise that during the past several years, the number of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed ...
When mechanical ventilation is initiated for surgical and acute-unit patients, protecting the fragile lungs while ...
Bayer Radiology’s Barbara Ruhland and Thom Kinst discuss how radiology departments can address the many different ...
Acquiring used equipment carries with it certain stereotypes that span the spectrum of good to bad. Facilities that ...
Editor’s Note: This is the result of a “virtual” roundtable discussion on image-guided radiation therapy (IGRT) with Drs ...
A 30-year-old woman arrives in the emergency room with “abdominal cramping and vaginal bleeding. A physical examination ...
Few medical devices are credited with preventing death and are used so rarely as automated external defibrillators (AEDs ...
ACT: What are some of the scenarios — decisions or investments — in which a hospital might want to consider doing a ...
Not too long ago, the capability of precisely directing and guiding a potent beam of radiation to eradicate a cancerous tumor without harming the healthy tissue around it was a pipe dream. Fodder for the imagination and science fiction.
Talk to the purveyors and supporters of digital radiography (DR) and you’ll hear that it’s the wave of the future and ultimately where the technology is headed – arguably replacing its earlier generation sibling, computed radiography (CR). However, raise that prospect with the CR crowd and you’ll likely hear something dramatically different.
About 10 years ago a close friend received some very bad news, but, oddly, she was happy about it. My friend was ...
June 25, 2006 