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Radiotherapy is a major tool in the clinician's arsenal against cancer, and new techniques are being developed that minimize damage to healthy tissue next to the targeted cancerous tumors, as well as improve the treatment effect by concentrating the radiation dose where it is most needed.
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An off-label use of MRI is showing significant promise in the treatment of patients with thalassemia, a condition that often requires frequent blood transfusions which leave patients at risk for complications from a dangerous build-up of iron in the heart.
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In light of its excellent safety profile, ultrasound does not usually figure into debates about whether imaging is being overused in this country. However, new recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) suggest there may be at least one indication for which ultrasound is being used inappropriately: screening for carotid artery stenosis (CAS) in asymptomatic patients.
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While the next generation of technology for breast cancer screening may well be based on digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT), there is another promising approach under development that also can produce three-dimensional images of the breast. Investigators in Texas and New York are reporting positive developments with respect to cone-beam breast CT (CBBCT), an approach that may be able to deliver certain advantages in terms of exam time, comfort, and diagnostic accuracy.
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A newly released guideline on colorectal cancer screening offers recommendations for various alternatives for colorectal cancer detection, including — for the first time — radiological examination by CT colonography (CTC), also known as virtual colonoscopy.
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Depending on which study you're looking at, the use of computer-aided detection (CAD) with mammography improves accuracy slightly, boosts inaccuracy slightly, or does little to impact accuracy either way.
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After a countywide smoking ban was implemented in Indiana's Monroe County, hospital admissions for heart attacks dropped 70% for non-smokers, but not for smokers, according to a new study.
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Clinicians changed the intended care of more than one in three cancer patients as the result of FDG-PET scan findings, according to a study of data from the National Oncologic PET Registry (NOPR), published online in the Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO).
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Early feedback on a new ultrasound technology suggests that it is bringing important improvements to the table for the treatment of heart-rhythm disorders.