News

Norton Clark Hospital has opened a newly renovated cardiac catheterization (cath) lab and unveiled a new CT scanner with ...
In radiation therapy, precision can save lives. Oncologists must carefully map the size and location of a tumor before ...
Frankie Maldonado, the Director of Operations for Life Guard Imaging joins Gayle Guyardo, the host of Bloom, to talk about ...
We read with great interest the published results of the RADIOSA trial by Giulia Marvaso and colleagues.1 This well designed ...
An AI-assisted model developed by researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine and the School of Engineering can take low-quality MRI heart scans and turn them into high-quality ...
Medical imaging scans that create detailed images of the body’s internal structures are widely used in medicine. Doctors need them to detect and manage certain types of cancer, assess the extent of ...
The take-home message should not be that CT scans represent a major danger and therefore need to be avoided at all costs. CT scans represent an important diagnostic tool for many conditions.
CT scans are quick, painless, non-invasive tests that can identify everything from brain tumors to injuries from an accident. But a new study published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine shows ...
A new CT scanner with advanced AI was launched at Mor Institute's Migdal Hameah branch in Tel Aviv. It’s one of the world’s most advanced systems, offering high-quality imaging and faster ...
According to a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, CT scans could result in approximately 103,000 future cancers, accounting for 5% of all new cancer diagnoses in the U.S.
According to a 2008 study, the average radiation dose from a CT scan ranges from 10-20 millisieverts (mSv), which corresponds to a lifetime risk of fatal cancer estimated at one in 2,000 scans.
May 8, 2025 – If you’ve ever hesitated before getting a CT scan, you’re not alone. A recent study linked 5% of all new cancer cases to radiation exposure from CT scans – a finding that’s ...