'American College of Radiology' Searchterm 'American College of Radiology' found in 1 term [ • ] and 2 definitions [• ]Result Pages : • American College of Radiology
(ACR) Professional society of radiologists and medical physicists.
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(DICOM) DICOM is the industry standard for transferral of radiologic images and other medical information between computers. Patterned after the Open System Interconnection of the International Standards Organization, DICOM enables digital communication between diagnostic and therapeutic equipment and systems from various manufacturers. The DICOM 3.0 standard evolved from versions 1.0 (1985) and 2.0 (1988) of a standard developed by the American College of Radiology (ACR) and National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA). To support the implementation and demonstration of DICOM 3.0, the RSNA Electronic Communications Committee began to work with the ACR-NEMA MedPacs ad hoc section in 1992. Also Picture Archiving and Communication Systems (PACS), which are connected with the Radiology Information System (RIS), use commonly the DICOM standard for the transfer and storage of medical images. See also Barcode, Annotation, Printer and Diagnostic Imaging. Further Reading: Basics:
• The digital mammography is an electronic imaging procedure of the breast. The number of breast imaging facilities equipped with digital mammography (also called computed radiography mammogram (CRM), CR mammogram) is growing due to a number of advantages. Digital images can be stored directly in a picture archiving and communication system (PACS) and allows the printing, enhancement, magnification, or brightness and contrast manipulation for further evaluation. The sensitivity of digital mammography compared to film mammography is better in women with dense breasts, a population at higher risk for breast cancer, due to these post processing possibilities. 'The American College of Radiology's (ACR) Imaging Network found that digital mammography detected up to 28 percent more cancers than film-screen mammography in women age 50 and younger, premenopausal and perimenopausal women, and women with dense breasts, as reported in October 2005 in the New England Journal of Medicine.' Advantages of digital mammography:
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Faster image acquisition;
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shorter examination time;
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improved contrast between dense and non-dense breast tissue;
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under or over x-ray exposure can be corrected without repeated mammograms;
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post processing of breast images for more accurate detection of breast cancer;
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Easy storage and transmission over phone lines or a network.
Existing mammography equipment can be converted to 'digital' operation, which allows cost savings compared to integrated digital mammography systems. See also Breast MRI. Further Reading: Basics:
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