Routine chest X-rays give so little medical benefit that they should be abandoned, the Food and Drug Administration says. Many hospitals have most incoming patients submit to chest X-rays. The idea is ...
Predicting risk Using a routine chest X-ray, the deep-learning model predicts future major adverse cardiovascular events with similar performance to the established clinical standard. (Courtesy: RSNA) ...
A large government study has found that routine chest X-rays, once a common type of screening, do not prevent lung cancer deaths. The study included more than 150,000 older Americans, with those who ...
CHICAGO (AP) - Routine chest X-rays do not prevent lung cancer deaths, not even in smokers or former smokers, according to a big government study challenging a once common type of screening. In the ...
Using a routine chest X-ray image, an artificial intelligence (AI) tool can identify non-smokers who are at high risk for lung cancer, according to a study being presented next week at the annual ...
Among the latest artificial intelligence innovations in health care, a routine chest X-ray could help identify non-smokers who are at a high risk for lung cancer. The study findings will be presented ...
CHICAGO — Routine chest X-rays do not prevent lung cancer deaths, not even in smokers or former smokers, according to a big government study challenging a once common type of screening. In the study ...
Dear Dr. Johnson: I work in a factory personnel office and recently we dropped our requirement for a lung X-ray as part of the pre-employment physical. I talked to the company doctor about this and he ...
CHICAGO -- An artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm successfully identified never smokers at high risk for lung cancer using existing x-rays in the electronic medical record (EMR), a researcher ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Artificial intelligence may predict 10-year heart disease risk from a single chest X-ray. For individuals with ...
A radiological technologist has described being genuinely shocked when the results of routine X-ray on one of his patients threw up something rarely seen. Diego Diaz, who is based in New York City and ...