We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies. Cookie Policy.

HospiMedica

Download Mobile App
Recent News AI Critical Care Surgical Techniques Patient Care Health IT Point of Care Business Focus

Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology to Feature 3D Imaging

By Daniel Beris
Posted on 08 Dec 2016
Print article
Image: Contrast-enhanced CT images used to create the dynamic 3D images (Photo courtesy of Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology).
Image: Contrast-enhanced CT images used to create the dynamic 3D images (Photo courtesy of Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology).
The current issue of the Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology features three-dimensional (3D) imaging embedded within its articles for the first time.

The 3D digital multimedia is being used to enhance the value of five papers, which focus on kidney injuries, tumor diagnoses, and dental medicine. The 3D images are incorporated directly into the articles, providing greater insights and learning opportunities, and demonstrating how imaging techniques can contribute to positive patient outcomes. The videos of the rotating 3D images can be accessed directly, allowing readers to examine them in detail and gain deeper understanding of the diagnoses, prognoses, and treatments described.

The first study shows how multi-slice spiral CT (MSCT) permits reliable detection of renal trauma and the associated organ or tissue injuries, enhancing diagnosis and classification of renal trauma or internal organ injures. The second article describes how creation of a 3D image helped physicians remove a large nephroblastoma in a 3-year old girl. The third shows how a rare congenital disorder resulting in an almost complete duplication of the ureter from the left kidney of a 27-year-old male patient can be visualized more effectively using MSCT, and how corrective surgery was facilitated by a 3D reconstruction of the patient's anatomy.

The next article describes how surgeons were able to achieve a better surgical outcome by integrating 3D-reconstructed CT images into a dynamic video for preoperative planning and intraoperative guidance during resection of an adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC). The diseased adrenal gland was resected completely, without neighbor organ injury and surgical complications. The final article describes how cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) helps evaluate the hard and soft tissues of the maxillofacial region in 3D and high spatial detail.

“State-of-the-art cross-sectional imaging approaches make it possible to visualize diseases-affected tissues or defected organs with greater assurance by minimizing the interrupter of overlying tissues to focus on individual organs, which aids in the detection and characterization of targeted tissues,” said guest editor Yuanyuan Zhang, MD, PhD, of Wake Forest School of Medicine (Winston-Salem, NC, USA). “The rotated multimedia 3D videos provide animations, which could better help medical students, residents, practitioners, and inquisitive minds better understand the diseases.”

“Digital and multimedia techniques are used more and more to facilitate scientific presentations,” said advisory editor-in-chief Hong Liu, PhD, of the center for bioengineering and school of electrical and computer Engineering at the University of Oklahoma (Norman, USA). “As an interdisciplinary journal publishing numerous papers spanning the field of medical imaging, the Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology should lead the way to serve our authors and readers with advanced presentation methods.”

Related Links:
Wake Forest School of Medicine
University of Oklahoma
Gold Member
Disposable Protective Suit For Medical Use
Disposable Protective Suit For Medical Use
Gold Member
12-Channel ECG
CM1200B
Silver Member
Wireless Mobile ECG Recorder
NR-1207-3/NR-1207-E
New
Traumatic Brain Injury Whole Blood Test
i-STAT TBI CARTRIDGE

Print article

Channels

Critical Care

view channel
Image: The new risk assessment tool determines patient-specific risks of developing unfavorable outcomes with heart failure (Photo courtesy of 123RF)

Powerful AI Risk Assessment Tool Predicts Outcomes in Heart Failure Patients

Heart failure is a serious condition where the heart cannot pump sufficient blood to meet the body's needs, leading to symptoms like fatigue, weakness, and swelling in the legs and feet, and it can ultimately... Read more

Surgical Techniques

view channel
Image: The multi-sensing device can be implanted into blood vessels to help physicians deliver timely treatment (Photo courtesy of IIT)

Miniaturized Implantable Multi-Sensors Device to Monitor Vessels Health

Researchers have embarked on a project to develop a multi-sensing device that can be implanted into blood vessels like peripheral veins or arteries to monitor a range of bodily parameters and overall health status.... Read more

Patient Care

view channel
Image: The portable, handheld BeamClean technology inactivates pathogens on commonly touched surfaces in seconds (Photo courtesy of Freestyle Partners)

First-Of-Its-Kind Portable Germicidal Light Technology Disinfects High-Touch Clinical Surfaces in Seconds

Reducing healthcare-acquired infections (HAIs) remains a pressing issue within global healthcare systems. In the United States alone, 1.7 million patients contract HAIs annually, leading to approximately... Read more

Point of Care

view channel
Image: The Quantra Hemostasis System has received US FDA special 510(k) clearance for use with its Quantra QStat Cartridge (Photo courtesy of HemoSonics)

Critical Bleeding Management System to Help Hospitals Further Standardize Viscoelastic Testing

Surgical procedures are often accompanied by significant blood loss and the subsequent high likelihood of the need for allogeneic blood transfusions. These transfusions, while critical, are linked to various... Read more