May 2002: Women's Health


Features


Double Check: A Closer Look at CAD
  by Lisa Fratt
  Sponsored by an educational grant from R2 Technology. As much as 20 to 40 percent of breast cancer cases are not detected at the screening stage. Computer-aided detection (CAD) has helped fill the gap very well, making it an attractive option to enhance cancer treatment.
Fusion Afoot: Oncology Imaging
  by Wayne Forrest
  Computed tomography has been the most widely used modality for oncology imaging, but the addition of positron emission tomography is raising the bar and making the fused technologies the gold standard for imaging cancer patients.


Departments

  To the Point
Imaging Women
  Emerging Trends
A Look at Market Drivers
  by Doug Orr
  Newswatch
May 2002
  Technology
Image Guidance Impacts, Surgical Procedures
  by Cheryl Hall Harris, R.N.
  Technology Now
Sailing the Cs
  by Sydney Schuster
  Implementing Digital
Planning for PACS
  by Sydney Schuster
Product Showcase
  Advertisers Index
May 2002
Special Section

Technology: Mammography's Digital Future
  by Laura Gater
  Clinicians and scientists continue to debate the merits of and differences between film-screen and digital mammography. In many ways, both technologies serve their supporters well in the name of patient care.
Technology Update: Ultrasound in Women's Health: The View in 2002
  by Judith Gunn Bronson
  Ultrasound is immediate, noninvasive, portable and still the workhorse in gynecological and obstetrical imaging — and making advances in imaging the breast too.
Market Update: How Hip is Bone Densitometry?
  by Lin Muschlitz
  Bone densitometry still has work to do in garnering the attention of primary-care physicians and the at-risk population.

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