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Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy

Image-guided diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are related to, or performed under, some kind of imaging. Such imaging may be direct inspection (as in open surgery) or indirect inspection as in endoscopy or laparoscopy. Common to all these techniques is the transformation of optical and visible i...

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Autores principales: Helmberger, Thomas, Martí-Bonmatí, Luis, Pereira, Philippe, Gillams, Alice, Martínez, Jose, Lammer, Johannes, Malagari, Katarina, Gangi, Afshin, de Baere, Thierry, Adam, E. Jane, Rasch, Coen, Budach, Volker, Reekers, Jim A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3579996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23325609
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13244-012-0213-9
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author Helmberger, Thomas
Martí-Bonmatí, Luis
Pereira, Philippe
Gillams, Alice
Martínez, Jose
Lammer, Johannes
Malagari, Katarina
Gangi, Afshin
de Baere, Thierry
Adam, E. Jane
Rasch, Coen
Budach, Volker
Reekers, Jim A.
author_facet Helmberger, Thomas
Martí-Bonmatí, Luis
Pereira, Philippe
Gillams, Alice
Martínez, Jose
Lammer, Johannes
Malagari, Katarina
Gangi, Afshin
de Baere, Thierry
Adam, E. Jane
Rasch, Coen
Budach, Volker
Reekers, Jim A.
author_sort Helmberger, Thomas
collection PubMed
description Image-guided diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are related to, or performed under, some kind of imaging. Such imaging may be direct inspection (as in open surgery) or indirect inspection as in endoscopy or laparoscopy. Common to all these techniques is the transformation of optical and visible information to a monitor or the eye of the operator. Image-guided therapy (IGT) differs by using processed imaging data acquired before, during and after a wide range of different imaging techniques. This means that the planning, performing and monitoring, as well as the control of the therapeutic procedure, are based and dependent on the “virtual reality” provided by imaging investigations. Since most of such imaging involves radiology in the broadest sense, there is a need to characterise IGT in more detail. In this paper, the technical, medico-legal and medico-political issues will be discussed. The focus will be put on state-of-the-art imaging, technical developments, methodological and legal requisites concerning radiation protection and licensing, speciality-specific limitations and crossing specialty borders, definition of technical and quality standards, and finally to the issue of awareness of IGT within the medical and public community. The specialty-specific knowledge should confer radiologists with a significant role in the overall responsibility for the imaging-related processes in various non-radiological specialties. These processes may encompass purchase, servicing, quality management, radiation protection and documentation, also taking responsibility for the definition and compliance with the legal requirements regarding all radiological imaging performed by non-radiologists.
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spelling pubmed-35799962013-02-27 Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy Helmberger, Thomas Martí-Bonmatí, Luis Pereira, Philippe Gillams, Alice Martínez, Jose Lammer, Johannes Malagari, Katarina Gangi, Afshin de Baere, Thierry Adam, E. Jane Rasch, Coen Budach, Volker Reekers, Jim A. Insights Imaging Statement Image-guided diagnostic and therapeutic procedures are related to, or performed under, some kind of imaging. Such imaging may be direct inspection (as in open surgery) or indirect inspection as in endoscopy or laparoscopy. Common to all these techniques is the transformation of optical and visible information to a monitor or the eye of the operator. Image-guided therapy (IGT) differs by using processed imaging data acquired before, during and after a wide range of different imaging techniques. This means that the planning, performing and monitoring, as well as the control of the therapeutic procedure, are based and dependent on the “virtual reality” provided by imaging investigations. Since most of such imaging involves radiology in the broadest sense, there is a need to characterise IGT in more detail. In this paper, the technical, medico-legal and medico-political issues will be discussed. The focus will be put on state-of-the-art imaging, technical developments, methodological and legal requisites concerning radiation protection and licensing, speciality-specific limitations and crossing specialty borders, definition of technical and quality standards, and finally to the issue of awareness of IGT within the medical and public community. The specialty-specific knowledge should confer radiologists with a significant role in the overall responsibility for the imaging-related processes in various non-radiological specialties. These processes may encompass purchase, servicing, quality management, radiation protection and documentation, also taking responsibility for the definition and compliance with the legal requirements regarding all radiological imaging performed by non-radiologists. Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2013-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3579996/ /pubmed/23325609 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13244-012-0213-9 Text en © The Author(s) 2013 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.
spellingShingle Statement
Helmberger, Thomas
Martí-Bonmatí, Luis
Pereira, Philippe
Gillams, Alice
Martínez, Jose
Lammer, Johannes
Malagari, Katarina
Gangi, Afshin
de Baere, Thierry
Adam, E. Jane
Rasch, Coen
Budach, Volker
Reekers, Jim A.
Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
title Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
title_full Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
title_fullStr Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
title_full_unstemmed Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
title_short Radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
title_sort radiologists’ leading position in image-guided therapy
topic Statement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3579996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23325609
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13244-012-0213-9
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