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The history of radiology /by Adrian M.K. Thomas, Arpan K. Banerjee.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Oxford : Oxford University Press, (c)2013.Description: 1 online resource (1 volume) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780191669705
  • 9781299677364
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • RC78 .H578 2013
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Subject: In 1890, Professor Arthur Willis Goodspeed, a professor of physics at Pennsylvania USA was working with an English born photographer, William N Jennings, when they accidentally produced a Röntgen Ray picture. Unfortunately, the significance of their findings were overlooked, and the formal discovery of X-rays was credited to Wilhelm Roentgen in 1895. The discovery has since transformed the practice of medicine, and over the course of the past 130 years, the development of new radiological techniques has continued to grow. The impact has been seen in virtually every hospital in the world, from.
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Includes bibliographical references.

Cover; Contents; About the authors; Abbreviations; 1 Wilhelm Röntgen and the discovery; The scientific background; Nikola Tesla; Röntgen and the discovery; Early reception of the discovery; The Nobel Prize; 2 Early radiology; Ernest Wilson (1871-1911); Corporal Edward Wallwork RAMC and radiation risks; Early pioneers; Defining the normal; Alban Köhler (1874-1947); Sebastian Gilbert Scott; Kathleen Clark (1898-1968) and radiographic standardization; British Authors; Early departments; Medico-legal radiology; Border control; 3 Military radiology; The Italo-Abyssinian War; Greco-Turkish War.

Walter Caverley Beevor and the Tirah CampaignJohn Battersby and the River War; The Spanish-American War; The Boer War; Marie Curie and the First World War; Florence Stoney; The Second World War; Post 1945; 4 Radiology and popular culture; Radiology and paper ephemera; Radiology and art; Radiology and the cinema; 5 Classical radiology; The plain film; Conventional tomography; The gastrointestinal tract; Contrast media and the renal tract; Traditional neuroradiology; Chest imaging including the tuberculosis screening story; 6 Computed tomographic scanning; The development of computed tomography.

Johann RadonAllan Cormack and Godfrey Hounsfield; Developments in CT scanning; Willi Kalender and helical scanning; Multislice scanning and its clinical impact; 7 Magnetic resonance imaging; 8 Ultrasound; Karl Theodor Dussik (1908-1968); John J. Wild (1914-2009); Ian Donald (1910-1987); Doppler ultrasound; The development of ultrasound; FAST ultrasound and bedside ultrasound; 9 Digital imaging, picture archiving, and communication systems; The development of digital processing; Teleradiology; PACS and HIS/RIS; 10 Interventional radiology; Development of angiography.

Werner Forssmann (1904-1979)Seldinger and his technique; Charles Dotter and angioplasty; Non-angiographic intervention; Image-guided biopsies and drainage; Modern interventional radiology; 11 A history of mammography; Raoul Leborgne; Robert Egan and Charles Gros; Breast screening; Digital mammography; Breast biopsy and one-stop clinics; Pelvimetry; Gynaecography; 12 Nuclear medicine and radioactivity: from nuclear biology to molecular imaging; Henri Becquerel and the Curies; The influence of nuclear medicine in the Second World War; Atoms for peace and Joseph Rotblat; Early nuclear medicine.

The rectilinear scannerHal Anger and his camera; The development of PET and SPECT; Molecular imaging; 13 Review and the future; The centrality of medical imaging to modern clinical medicine; Appendix 1: Early British radiology journals; Appendix 2: Early British radiology societies; Appendix 3: Annotated bibliography and reading list; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; X; Y; Z.

In 1890, Professor Arthur Willis Goodspeed, a professor of physics at Pennsylvania USA was working with an English born photographer, William N Jennings, when they accidentally produced a Röntgen Ray picture. Unfortunately, the significance of their findings were overlooked, and the formal discovery of X-rays was credited to Wilhelm Roentgen in 1895. The discovery has since transformed the practice of medicine, and over the course of the past 130 years, the development of new radiological techniques has continued to grow. The impact has been seen in virtually every hospital in the world, from.

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