PACS installation raises security issues for Australian health system
July 1st 2002Patient privacy and medical information security concerns are not confined to North America. Security concerns play a role in PACS installations elsewhere in the world. Last year, the Central Sydney Area Health Service (CSAHS) in Australia began the
How can you best prepare staff for the arrival of PACS?
July 1st 2002Prof. Dimiter TscholakoffProfessor of radiology Rudolfstiftung Hospital, ViennaPACS users need to be well informed about legal and institutional requirements or regulations for archiving. In Vienna, medical records have to be kept for at least 30
Hitachi enters PET marketplace with low-end scanner from CPS
June 26th 2002CTI seeks to proliferate core positron technologyHitachi Medical Systems formally unveiled an entry-level PET scanner at the annual meeting of the Society of Nuclear Medicine in Los Angeles June 15 to 19.The scanner, which Hitachi
PACS vendors learn to watch their language
June 24th 2002Digital medicine may be new to many domestic radiologists, but radiologists practicing in countries like Iran can find PACS-related technologies virtually alien. The fact that most PACS workstations are designed by English speakers for English speakers
Siemens 3D technology lets surgeons 'see' inside patients
June 12th 2002Prototype could improve efficiency and precisionAugmented reality image guidance is how Siemens executives describe a prototype that enables in situ visualization. The technology features a head-mounted display that allows surgeons
New MRA technologies offer chance to boost vascular applications
June 12th 2002Studies should see dramatic increase by 2005Patient tables might seem too ordinary, too basic to play an important role in the future of MR. But tables, and how they are used, may shape the acquisition of vascular studies.At the
Manufacturing challenges snarl production of 1T open MR scanners
June 12th 2002Siemens and Philips target late 2003 for commercializationHigh-field open MR scanners are technological phantoms, existing in spirit but not in substance. While GE Medical Systems and Hitachi are in production with systems they
Siemens and Duke collaborate on cardiovascular MR
June 12th 2002Duke University Medical Center has purchased two Sonata MR systems from Siemens Medical Solutions. The two scanners will be dedicated to cardiac MR. Research will focus on myocardial viability imaging. The ultimate goal is to define how MR viability
MRA bolus tracker begins clinical career
June 12th 2002The first installation of Siemens' Care Bolus software package has been completed on a 0.2T Concerto system at the Wide Open MRI clinic in Hagerstown, MD. The software, which is designed specifically for Siemens' open MR systems, allows clinicians to
Interventional radiology sets agenda for 21st century
June 1st 2002Cardiovascular" may no longer be part of the Society of Interventional Radiology's name, but vascular access remains a crucial element of the latest research presented at the society's annual meeting in Baltimore in April. Stent design, embolization therapies, and gene delivery topped the clinical agenda even as the society launched ambitious efforts to reinvent its image.
GE infuriates competitors at ISMRM with claims about new MR pipeline
May 29th 2002Siemens and Philips debate significance of GE subsystemThe annual meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine is an unlikely location for either groundbreaking announcements or controversy. Vendors