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RSNA preview: CT coronary angiography, CT colonography gain widespread use
By Donna Domino |
November 20, 2008
Highlights of the 2008 RSNA meeting include discussions about the use of CT angiography as a noninvasive technique for diagnosing coronary artery disease and the replacement of standard optical colonoscopy with CT colonography to screen for colon cancer.
Coronary CTA is a hot topic, said Dr. David Levin, professor emeritus of radiology at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.
"It has high impact and a lot of ramifications for a lot of patients, because it's a way to diagnose coronary artery disease noninvasively," Levin said.
The technique has been used for the last five years, but it has become more widely used with the development of 64-slice CT scanners in academic and large community hospitals, as well as in many physicians' offices.
"It's a good diagnostic test," Levin said.
He cited as another topic of interest a relatively new procedure: CT colonography.
"There's a lot of interest in using it for screening colon cancer," Levin said.
Some disagreement persists, however, between radiologists and gastroenterologists about using CT colonography or the more common standard optical colonoscopy.
In the Health Services Policy and Research areas, notable topics will include the disparity in types of imaging related to socioeconomic status or insurance coverage, the effects of including a patient photo with a radiologic exam, occupational stress in radiologists, and evaluation of an outpatient imaging center where radiologists consult directly with patients, said subcommittee chair Dr. Ruth C. Carlos.
Other presentations this year will address resident education, evidence-based medicine, and guideline development.
Among the notable scientific papers to be introduced at the upcoming meeting in Chicago are the following: - Availability, Awareness, and Use of Dose Reduction Technologies Among Radiologists: The CT Awareness of Radiation Exposure Study (CARES), Ella A. Kazerooni, M.D., Ann Arbor, MI, Mon., Dec. 1, #SSC09-03, 10:50 a.m., Room N229
- Creating a Patient Centered Radiology Facility: Logistics, Barriers, and Recommendations in Implementing an Outpatient Imaging Center Where Radiologists Consult Directly with Their Patients, Pat Auveek Basu, M.D., Palo Alto, CA, Wed., Dec. 3, #SSM12-02, 3:10 p.m., Room N229
- If I Choose Not to Participate in Regular Screening Mammography How Long Will I Live If I Develop Breast Cancer? John D. Keen, M.D., MBA, Brookfield, IL, Wed., Dec. 3, #SSM12-04, 3:30 p.m., Room N229
- Use of Imaging Services by Uninsured Hospital Inpatients, James Moser, Ph.D., Reston, VA, Wed., Dec. 3, #SSM12-05, 3:40 p.m., Room N229
RSNA preview: Focus sessions explore imaging controversies
November 20, 2008
You can tell by the titles of special focus sessions planned for the 2008 RSNA that program committee chair Dr. Robert M. Quencer sees an opportunity to use the sessions to examine tough issues affecting clinical imaging practice.
RSNA preview: CAD improves detection of pulmonary embolisms
November 20, 2008
Computer-aided detection significantly improves the sensitivity of pulmonary embolism imaging, according to a study that will be presented at the 2008 RSNA meeting. Other studies show that specially developed CAD schemes can detect flat lesions that are often missed in CT colonography.
RSNA preview: Cancer specialists voice mixed feelings about oncology imaging
November 20, 2008
RSNA presentations on prostate cancer staging and treatment, along with talks on radiation therapy for thoracic malignancies, have piqued the interest of cancer care specialists. But in general, oncologists and radiation oncologists conveyed some reservations about this year’s offerings in oncologic imaging and therapies.
RSNA preview: Scientific sessions expand limits of imaging diagnosis and guidance
November 20, 2008
There is nothing like a little momentum to help the RSNA organizers present the latest developments in imaging research in the meeting’s scientific sessions. Everyone associated with imaging sciences from Beijing to New York City understands that presenting research in Chicago is an essential requirement for membership in this unique community.
Tech advisor CT vendors plot strategies for growth
November 1, 2008
CT vendors have diverged this year as never before, choosing technological paths to new generations of scanners that reflect their own particular engineering strengths and history of R&D. Core developments by each have translated into novel capabilities. Software and mechanical fixes have countered weaknesses.
CR prepares to challenge solid-state digital mammo
November 1, 2008
Since full-field mammography
started going digital eight years
ago, systems based on flat-panel
arrays have dominated. But computed
radiography has begun seeping into
that market and, if the FDA allows
CR companies to apply for streamlined
510(k) approval of mammography
upgrades, the trickle of CR products
could turn into a flood.
Vendors polish advanced apps with 3T platforms
November 1, 2008
MR vendors have been chipping away at new clinical applications for years. They have pointed to 3T as the means to expand routine practice in ways that are not routine, adding computing engines to handle the massive volumes of data that would gush forth, expanding data pipelines, building out coils with extended channels—in short, creating the infrastructure to support a new diagnostic order. This year, they mean business.
Digital mammography: CR and tomo could change game
November 1, 2008
Full-field digital mammography was built on solid-state technology.
The first such machines, introduced eight years ago,
were based on flat-panel detectors, a tradition that continued
until the commercial introduction of computed radiography a
few years ago.
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