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In focus medical technology

This issue showcases the impact of high-energy physics in the medical arena. Ever since the discovery of X-rays, developments in fundamental physics have found their way into medical applications. From advanced imaging technologies to dedicated accelerators for cancer therapy and nuclear medicine, s...

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Autor principal: CERN
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: IOP 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2747991
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author CERN
author_facet CERN
author_sort CERN
collection CERN
description This issue showcases the impact of high-energy physics in the medical arena. Ever since the discovery of X-rays, developments in fundamental physics have found their way into medical applications. From advanced imaging technologies to dedicated accelerators for cancer therapy and nuclear medicine, simulations, and data analytics, state-of-the-art techniques derived from particle accelerators, detectors, and physics computing are routinely used in clinical practice and medical research centres. This issue opens with a new CERN project to expand the use of hadron therapy (p5), from which upwards of 170,000 cancer patients have already benefitted at almost 100 centres worldwide, and describes how technology developed for a linear electron–positron collider at CERN is enabling a paradigm-shifting radiotherapy technique called FLASH (p9 and 12). Accelerators are also rapidly growing in importance for the production of radioisotopes (p25), as demonstrated by CERN’s MEDICIS facility (p23), while recent articles from the Courier’s archive demonstrate the role of particle accelerator (p27) and detector (p15) expertise in the fight against COVID-19. We hope you enjoy this “med-tech” snapshot, which demonstrates the broad societal impact of fundamental research.
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spelling cern-27479912021-07-30T13:10:50Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2747991engCERNIn focus medical technologyHealth Physics and Radiation EffectsThis issue showcases the impact of high-energy physics in the medical arena. Ever since the discovery of X-rays, developments in fundamental physics have found their way into medical applications. From advanced imaging technologies to dedicated accelerators for cancer therapy and nuclear medicine, simulations, and data analytics, state-of-the-art techniques derived from particle accelerators, detectors, and physics computing are routinely used in clinical practice and medical research centres. This issue opens with a new CERN project to expand the use of hadron therapy (p5), from which upwards of 170,000 cancer patients have already benefitted at almost 100 centres worldwide, and describes how technology developed for a linear electron–positron collider at CERN is enabling a paradigm-shifting radiotherapy technique called FLASH (p9 and 12). Accelerators are also rapidly growing in importance for the production of radioisotopes (p25), as demonstrated by CERN’s MEDICIS facility (p23), while recent articles from the Courier’s archive demonstrate the role of particle accelerator (p27) and detector (p15) expertise in the fight against COVID-19. We hope you enjoy this “med-tech” snapshot, which demonstrates the broad societal impact of fundamental research.IOPoai:cds.cern.ch:27479912021
spellingShingle Health Physics and Radiation Effects
CERN
In focus medical technology
title In focus medical technology
title_full In focus medical technology
title_fullStr In focus medical technology
title_full_unstemmed In focus medical technology
title_short In focus medical technology
title_sort in focus medical technology
topic Health Physics and Radiation Effects
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2747991
work_keys_str_mv AT cern infocusmedicaltechnology