Experience Stories

Seno Scan

A Physician, a Patient and a Technology Whose Time Is Now

Sponsored by Seno Medical

If certainty is the holy grail of diagnostic breast imaging, then opto-acoustic ultrasound is the treasure map showing exactly where to find it. While other imaging modalities can help distinguish a benign lesion from a malignant mass, only OA/US practically guarantees a definitive diagnosis without invasive medicine, ionizing radiation or claustrophobic dread.

Enlitic Radiologist

Konica Minolta Healthcare moves into enterprise imaging powered by AWS

Sponsored by Konica Minolta

Konica Minolta Healthcare is introducing Exa Enterprise, a new enterprise imaging solution that encompasses the Exa PACS-RIS core powered by AWS’s proven cloud solution and its data. This new enterprise cloud solution will deliver exceptionally fast access to data and boost efficiency across imaging specialties.

Imaging scan

Breast specialists have seen the future. It’s opto-acoustic imaging.

Sponsored by Seno Medical

Few radiology subspecialties can match mammography at adopting new imaging modalities to improve patient care. Consider: The past 10 to 15 years have seen the rise of digital breast tomosynthesis, automated breast ultrasound, breast MRI (with and without diffusion weighting), low-dose positron emission mammography and contrast-enhanced dual-energy digital mammography. That’s just to name a few.  

AI Doctor

From acquisition to innovation: How Microsoft is advancing diagnostic imaging

Sponsored by Microsoft

It’s been two and a half years since Microsoft completed its acquisition of Nuance Communications for a reported $19.7 billion. At the time of the March 2022 transaction, Microsoft said it liked Nuance for its core strengths—AI-powered voice recognition and related software and services—across numerous industries.

Hidden Costs of Legacy Image Exchange

The hidden costs of legacy image exchange solutions

Sponsored by PocketHealth

A recent 2024 PocketHealth survey of 202 U.S. hospital and imaging center decision-makers highlights the significant challenges healthcare providers face with legacy image exchange systems. The survey and conversations with industry leaders reveal that these outdated solutions impact both operational efficiency and patient satisfaction, often resulting in additional workload and increased costs.

laboratory with scientists

Pathology Is Going Digital: Lessons from Early Adopter

Sponsored by Pure Storage

Five years ago, two key takeaways from a survey of their pathologists sent NorthShore University HealthSystem toward the front lines of a technological revolution: digital pathology.

The team almost unanimously agreed that, first, it was time to consider AI as an aid to microscopic tissue analysis. And second, 73% wanted the flexibility to work remotely at another site or at home, at least sometimes, via telepathology.

nurse using computer

The Path to Digital Pathology: 3 Obstacles, 3 Opportunities

Sponsored by Pure Storage

It was about 2000 when Yale pathologist John Sinard, MD, PhD, first heard the prediction. “In five years, we won’t be using microscopes,” a respected peer quipped. “We’ll be examining all our slides as digitized images on computer monitors.”

Nearly a quarter-century later, Sinard reports: “I’m at my workstation, and my microscope is sitting right here next to me.”

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

15 years into digital pathology, Memorial Sloan Kettering offers questions to ask, data to learn from

Sponsored by Pure Storage

With more than 7 million digitized slides on hand, the pathology department at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City represents one of the largest repositories of whole slide images in the world. It’s no surprise the library is so large, as it’s been accruing new images since 2008. And with total case volumes exceeding one million slide reads per year, the inventory continues to grow at that scale.