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Renal Artery Duplex Imaging - Society for Vascular Ultrasound
Renal Artery Duplex Imaging - Society for Vascular Ultrasound

... is provided to the physician to direct patient management and render a final diagnosis. Diagnostic criteria must include application of published criteria or internally generated criteria. INSTRUMENTATION: 3.1 Use appropriate duplex instrumentation, which includes display of both two-dimensional str ...
Pediatric Radiology
Pediatric Radiology

... ACGME and its partners will be able to determine whether milestones in the first four levels appropriately represent the developmental framework, and whether Milestone data are of sufficient quality to be used for high-stakes decisions. Examples are provided with some milestones. Please note that th ...
CT Dose Measures
CT Dose Measures

... Conversion (k) Factors for adults and children of various ages ...
Value of Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance
Value of Echo-Planar Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance

... Middle-ear cholesteatoma is usually managed by surgery. Surgical methods include well-established open or closed mastoidectomy techniques. Canal wall up surgery provides many benefits to patients during the follow-up period. However, canal wall up surgery is associated with a 20%-30% incidence of re ...
MRI of Sports-Related Injuries of the Foot and Ankle: Part 1
MRI of Sports-Related Injuries of the Foot and Ankle: Part 1

... Curr Probl Diagn Radiol, July/August 2003 ...
Trends in radiation protection of positron emission tomography
Trends in radiation protection of positron emission tomography

... techniques. One of the main evolutions is the combination of positron emission tomography (PET) and computed tomography (CT) on a single gantry as a hybrid PET/CT scanner. This provides both anatomical and functional images of the patient as a fused image. Since its introduction in 1998 (Beyer et al ...
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... in cases where the damage is a double-strand breaks the repairs may not easy repaired which may lead to induction of solid cancers [2]. Measurements of these damage cause by photons are described in two main folds. Those damage cause by high dose rate during therapy and those cause by low dose rate ...
Thoracic Spine radiography - Saint Francis Veterinary Center
Thoracic Spine radiography - Saint Francis Veterinary Center

... Ventrodorsal oblique projection: thoracic spine Subtle lesions, fractures, and intervertebral disk disease are a few of the conditions that may require a ventrodorsal oblique projection of the spine (Figure 5). • From the straight ventrodorsal position of the thoracic spine, obliquely rotate the pat ...
Society of Nuclear Medicine Procedure Guideline
Society of Nuclear Medicine Procedure Guideline

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Spiral CT
Spiral CT

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The Debate on Pelvic Lymphadenopathy Size Significance in

... varies with anatomic site and underlying tumor type.7 Different studies are contradictory regarding the correlation between nodal size and the likelihood of lymph node metastasis.14 There is a fundamental problem when relying on size as a main criterion for the diagnosis of nodal metastases. The dif ...
Nonrigid Registration of Joint Histograms for Intensity
Nonrigid Registration of Joint Histograms for Intensity

... can be estimated by a few distinct categories. Furthermore, it is highly dependent on the quality of the Gaussian fit. Weisenfeld and Warfield propose a combined intensity standardization and inhomogeneity correction method in [18]. They estimate a multiplicative correction field that adapts the int ...
reduced radiation exposure and iodine load at low tube kilovoltage
reduced radiation exposure and iodine load at low tube kilovoltage

... CTPAs being used as a diagnostic tool will not decrease [18] . Furthermore, there are a growing number of young adults with suspected PEs who are examined using CTPA. The reliability of formulas used to estimate the relative risk of cancer development, resulting from low-dose ionizing radiation (i.e ...
Quality control guidance for nuclear medicine equipment
Quality control guidance for nuclear medicine equipment

... equipment, the object being imaged, the professional skills of the person performing an examination and the subjectivity of the person interpreting the image (Figure 2). Optimization requires in addition to technical quality control, an assessment of both the patient radiation exposure and diagnost ...
Imaging of knee injuries with special focus on tibial plateau
Imaging of knee injuries with special focus on tibial plateau

... are often difficult to obtain, and in those patients, radiography is unreliable to rule out fractures. Study II showed that MDCT can serve to evaluate cruciate ligaments as well. MDCT detected intact cruciate ligaments with good specificity, accuracy, and negative predictive value, but the assessme ...
Non-rigid image registration: theory and practice
Non-rigid image registration: theory and practice

... medical image analysis that has benefited from 20 years of development [1]. It is a process for determining the correspondence of features between images collected at different times or using different imaging modalities. The correspondences can be used to change the appearance – by rotating, transl ...
Estimation of coronary flow reserve: Can SPECT compete with other
Estimation of coronary flow reserve: Can SPECT compete with other

... adenosine-induced coronary vasodilatation. We have calculated both regional and global CFR measurements in canines and in patients using the ratio of the wash-in for adenosine-induced coronary vasodilatation (stress) to the wash-in at baseline flow (rest) as the CFR measurement. Our regional measure ...
Clinical study of peroneal artery perforators with
Clinical study of peroneal artery perforators with

... usage. Despite gold-standard accuracy, catheter angiography is also invasive, with potential complications including haematoma and false-aneurisms. More recently, imaging technologies have become available that can visualise cutaneous perforator vessels in addition to the major pedicles, increasing ...
Educational Objectives TG113: Improving Treatment Consistency and Data Quality for Clinical Trials
Educational Objectives TG113: Improving Treatment Consistency and Data Quality for Clinical Trials

... Emphasis on process improvements to decrease the variability in clinical trials (and improve our knowledge of differences) Design of trials: Allow for variable margins based on immobilization and localization methods Continue to require credentialing as new technologies are implemented at different ...
QIBA DWI Profile
QIBA DWI Profile

... media having no b-value or diffusion time dependence are preferred. For such media, the standard formula, ADC0,b = { [ln(DWI0/DWIb)] / b } can be used to generate ADC maps over the b-value range 0 to b. It is appropriate to first apply a noise threshold filter to mask low SNR pixels that otherwise l ...
Chapter 4 Medical Data Visualization
Chapter 4 Medical Data Visualization

... in contrast, skewed labs distort the overall shape, allowing the viewer to quickly identify which axis (i.e., lab) is discrepant and the direction of imbalance (low values gravitating towards the center of the plot, high values being on the edge). Adaptations of the radar graph also use area to comp ...
18F-FDOPA PET Imaging of Brain Tumors: Comparison Study with
18F-FDOPA PET Imaging of Brain Tumors: Comparison Study with

... 18F-FDG PET for imaging of low-grade tumors and evaluating recurrent tumors. 18F-FDOPA PET may prove especially useful for imaging of recurrent low-grade tumors and for distinguishing tumor recurrence from radiation necrosis. Key Words: 18F-FDOPA; 18F-FDG; PET; brain tumors; diagnosis; accuracy J Nu ...
Effect of Backscattered Radiation on X
Effect of Backscattered Radiation on X

... (kVp) due to the capability of grid to attenuate more backscattered photons with low energy. Different antibackscattered grids show the best values in enhancement of image contrast index at lower peak tube voltage (50 kVp) because more backscattered photons can be attenuated by anti-backscattered gr ...
Policies Standards And Guidelines For Radiologic Technology
Policies Standards And Guidelines For Radiologic Technology

... Section 5. Bachelor of Science in Radiologic Technology graduates, like any other Health Professions Education, must be able to apply the cognitive, psychomotor, and affective aspects of the profession in the performance of radiological procedures. Graduates shall: 5.1. provide health care services ...
Closing the Gap to the Diffraction Limit: Near
Closing the Gap to the Diffraction Limit: Near

... microscopy, stimulated emission depletion microscopy and structured illumination microscopy [1–3]. This dissertation presents a versatile soft x-ray diffraction microscope with 50 nm resolution using tabletop coherent soft x-ray sources. This work represents the first high resolution demonstrations of ...
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Medical imaging



Medical imaging is the technique and process of creating visual representations of the interior of a body for clinical analysis and medical intervention. Medical imaging seeks to reveal internal structures hidden by the skin and bones, as well as to diagnose and treat disease. Medical imaging also establishes a database of normal anatomy and physiology to make it possible to identify abnormalities. Although imaging of removed organs and tissues can be performed for medical reasons, such procedures are usually considered part of pathology instead of medical imaging.As a discipline and in its widest sense, it is part of biological imaging and incorporates radiology which uses the imaging technologies of X-ray radiography, magnetic resonance imaging, medical ultrasonography or ultrasound, endoscopy, elastography, tactile imaging, thermography, medical photography and nuclear medicine functional imaging techniques as positron emission tomography.Measurement and recording techniques which are not primarily designed to produce images, such as electroencephalography (EEG), magnetoencephalography (MEG), electrocardiography (ECG), and others represent other technologies which produce data susceptible to representation as a parameter graph vs. time or maps which contain information about the measurement locations. In a limited comparison these technologies can be considered as forms of medical imaging in another discipline.Up until 2010, 5 billion medical imaging studies had been conducted worldwide. Radiation exposure from medical imaging in 2006 made up about 50% of total ionizing radiation exposure in the United States.In the clinical context, ""invisible light"" medical imaging is generally equated to radiology or ""clinical imaging"" and the medical practitioner responsible for interpreting (and sometimes acquiring) the images is a radiologist. ""Visible light"" medical imaging involves digital video or still pictures that can be seen without special equipment. Dermatology and wound care are two modalities that use visible light imagery. Diagnostic radiography designates the technical aspects of medical imaging and in particular the acquisition of medical images. The radiographer or radiologic technologist is usually responsible for acquiring medical images of diagnostic quality, although some radiological interventions are performed by radiologists.As a field of scientific investigation, medical imaging constitutes a sub-discipline of biomedical engineering, medical physics or medicine depending on the context: Research and development in the area of instrumentation, image acquisition (e.g. radiography), modeling and quantification are usually the preserve of biomedical engineering, medical physics, and computer science; Research into the application and interpretation of medical images is usually the preserve of radiology and the medical sub-discipline relevant to medical condition or area of medical science (neuroscience, cardiology, psychiatry, psychology, etc.) under investigation. Many of the techniques developed for medical imaging also have scientific and industrial applications.Medical imaging is often perceived to designate the set of techniques that noninvasively produce images of the internal aspect of the body. In this restricted sense, medical imaging can be seen as the solution of mathematical inverse problems. This means that cause (the properties of living tissue) is inferred from effect (the observed signal). In the case of medical ultrasonography, the probe consists of ultrasonic pressure waves and echoes that go inside the tissue to show the internal structure. In the case of projectional radiography, the probe uses X-ray radiation, which is absorbed at different rates by different tissue types such as bone, muscle and fat.The term noninvasive is used to denote a procedure where no instrument is introduced into a patient's body which is the case for most imaging techniques used.
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