Remove Communication Remove Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine Remove Education
article thumbnail

AI reanimates Roentgen

AuntMinnie

Navid Mostaghni, a medical student at California University of Science and Medicine, in Colton, CA, is co-author of the article. Navid Mostaghni, a medical student at California University of Science and Medicine, in Colton, CA, is co-author of the article. Original image of Roentgen used to generate the video.

X-ray 120
article thumbnail

Meet the Minnies 2024 semifinal candidates

AuntMinnie

The following is the list of candidates for the 2024 edition of the Minnies, AuntMinnie.com 's campaign to recognize the best and brightest in medical imaging. This year, hundreds of candidates have been selected as semifinalists for 14 categories, ranging from Most Influential Radiology Researcher to Best New Radiology Software.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Sculpting Images: Unveiling the Vital Role of 3D Printing in Radiology (Madhya Pradesh, Jabalpur, Balaghat, Chhindwara, Katni, Mandla, Harda, Narsinghpur, Seoni, Dindori, Betul)

Future Teleradiology

This blog post explores the vital role of 3D printing in radiology, shedding light on its applications, benefits, and how it is reshaping the landscape of medical imaging and patient care. Highlight the shift from traditional two-dimensional imaging to the creation of physical, anatomically accurate replicas.

article thumbnail

A brief history of radiology

Radiology Cafe

After working for weeks in his lab experimenting on the production of ‘strange rays’, which he referred to as ‘X’, he asked his wife Anna Bertha to lend ‘a hand’, the left one to be precise, which he used to produce the first X-ray image. after seeing the image. (2) It all started when Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen discovered X-rays in 1895.