The Diagnostic Imaging MRI modality focus page provides information, videos, podcasts, and the latest news about industry product developments, trial results, screening guidelines, and protocol guidance that touch on the use of MRI across the healthcare continuum, including breast, neurological, cardiovascular, prostate imaging, and more.
October 18th 2025
The iron-based brain MRI contrast agent Ferabright (ferumoxytol injection) is indicated for adult patients with known or suspected malignant neoplasms.
Survey identifies orthopedists’ preferences for MR knee reports
December 28th 2004Radiologists need to communicate with referring physicians more often and listen more closely to orthopedics surgeons’ reporting preferences, according to the results of University of California, San Diego survey that were announced at the RSNA meeting.
MRI scores with basketball players at risk for injury
December 2nd 2004Research from Duke University, where stress fractures of the fifth metatarsal have been the proverbial Achilles heel of more than one Blue Devil basketball star, may help team practitioners identify players at risk for this injury even before symptoms develop.
European trial links MRI signs to clinical symptoms in Parkinson’s syndrome
December 2nd 2004In preliminary results from a three-country randomized trial, researchers report finding a correlation between MRI signs and the clinical symptoms seen in patients with multiple system atrophy (MSA) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP).
Endorectal coils boost accuracy of MR prostate cancer diagnosis
December 1st 2004Patients hate endorectal coils. But results presented at RSNA 2004 show without equivocation that the devices boost the diagnostic confidence of imaging studies critical to determining how prostate disease should be properly managed.
Survey identifies orthopedists’ preferences for MR knee reports
November 30th 2004Radiologists need to communicate with referring physicians more often and listen more closely to orthopedics surgeons’ reporting preferences, according to the results of University of California, San Diego survey that were announced Tuesday at the RSNA meeting.
Diffusion tensor imaging uncovers several keys to ADHD
November 29th 2004The disruption of dopamine transportation in brain white matter may be the underlying reason that children suffer from attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD. In addition, MR diffusion tensor imaging suggests that drug therapy repairs the damaged fiber bundles indicated in ADHD pathology.
Greater use of noncardiac pacemakers raises MR safety concerns
November 28th 2004The growing popularity of noncardiac pacemakers is putting additional pressures on radiologists to recognize them on MR imaging, check for their proper positioning and complications, and determine the MR compatibility of the various devices.
Brain regions battle for decision-making dominance
November 22nd 2004You’re offered a giant bowl of rocky road ice cream on Thanksgiving, but you’d like to lose 15 pounds by New Year’s Day. What do you do? Princeton University researchers have discovered that two separate brain areas are involved in the decision to choose short-term satisfaction or settle for long-term happiness.
Functional MRI speeds development of psychiatric drugs
November 4th 2004Drug manufacturers are increasingly relying on functional MRI to help assess the efficacy of psychiatric drugs. It could potentially save millions of dollars and help speed effective drugs to the marketplace, according to speakers at the Horizon Seminar “Imaging and Healthcare: The Future” held last month in Cambridge, U.K.
Government funds huge neuroimaging study for Alzheimer’s
October 14th 2004The government today announced its participation in one of the largest initiatives to date to determine effective neuroimaging techniques that will help chart brain changes associated with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease. The announcement comes barely two weeks after Medicare agreed to reimburse for PET studies of suspected Alzheimer’s patients.
Commentary: The democratization of CT -- and MR
October 13th 2004If you think cardiology is the only opportunity for niche CT, think again. CT could well be on the verge of a major change in usage fomented not by technology but by perspective. And MR might not be far behind. As happens so often, history will guide the way.
MR perfusion determines degree of coronary stenoses
October 11th 2004Quantitative myocardial first-pass perfusion can distinguish coronary artery stenoses with a high degree of specificity and negative predictive value. This noninvasive test offers an alternative to diagnostic catheterization to grade the severity of coronary artery disease, according to a presentation last week at the North American Society of Cardiac Imaging meeting in Amelia Island, FL.
Cardiac MR perfusion -- with some help -- assesses coronaries
October 8th 2004MR perfusion imaging, along with intracoronary pressure data, may help identify hemodynamically relevant coronary artery diseases, according to a study presented this week at the North American Society for Cardiac Imaging meeting in Amelia Island, FL.