Topic: Imaging of Acute Trauma, Solid Organ Injury
Summary: In this episode, we continue a discussion of imaging acute trauma. This part emphasizes the imaging of solid organ injury. The organs discussed are the liver, spleen, kidney, pancreas, adrenal gland and gallbladder. We focus on recent changes in diagnostic criteria since 2018 and their significance in the daily diagnosis and management of trauma patients.
Host: Christopher Cerniglia, DO, ME, FAOCR. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Musculoskeletal Imaging & Intervention, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Guest: Hao Lo, MD, MBA. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Emergency Radiology, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Resources:
Kozar, R. A., Crandall, M., Shanmuganathan, K., Zarzaur, B. L., Coburn, M., Cribari, C., & AAST Patient Assessment Committee. (2018). Organ injury scaling 2018 update: spleen, liver, and kidney. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, 85(6), 1119-1122.
AAST Injury Scoring Scale. https://www.aast.org/resources-detail/injury-scoring-scale
Lee, J. T., Slade, E., Uyeda, J., Steenburg, S. D., Chong, S. T., Tsai, R.,& LeBedis, C. A. (2021). American Society of Emergency Radiology Multicenter Blunt Splenic Trauma Study: CT and Clinical Findings. Radiology, 202917.
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Topic: Imaging of Acute Trauma, Solid Organ Injury
Summary: In this episode, we continue a discussion of imaging acute trauma. This part emphasizes the imaging of solid organ injury. The organs discussed are the liver, spleen, kidney, pancreas, adrenal gland and gallbladder. We focus on recent changes in diagnostic criteria since 2018 and their significance in the daily diagnosis and management of trauma patients.
Host: Christopher Cerniglia, DO, ME, FAOCR. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Musculoskeletal Imaging & Intervention, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Guest: Hao Lo, MD, MBA. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Emergency Radiology, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Resources:
Kozar, R. A., Crandall, M., Shanmuganathan, K., Zarzaur, B. L., Coburn, M., Cribari, C., & AAST Patient Assessment Committee. (2018). Organ injury scaling 2018 update: spleen, liver, and kidney. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, 85(6), 1119-1122.
AAST Injury Scoring Scale. https://www.aast.org/resources-detail/injury-scoring-scale
Lee, J. T., Slade, E., Uyeda, J., Steenburg, S. D., Chong, S. T., Tsai, R.,& LeBedis, C. A. (2021). American Society of Emergency Radiology Multicenter Blunt Splenic Trauma Study: CT and Clinical Findings. Radiology, 202917.
Special Episode 24: Economic History of Radiology (Part 2) - Advanced Imaging & Bubble Years
From The ViewBox
22 minutes 30 seconds
4 years ago
Special Episode 24: Economic History of Radiology (Part 2) - Advanced Imaging & Bubble Years
In this episode we continue discussing a historical perspective of the economics of radiology. In part 2 of this 4 part series, Prof. Levy and Dr. Rosen present changes which occurred in radiology after Medicare, including advanced imaging and how this affected cost and the radiology job market. We continue by discussing how these changes led to the bubble years of the 1990s.
Hosts: Christopher Cerniglia, DO, ME, FAOCR. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Musculoskeletal Imaging & Intervention, UMMS Dept of Radiology. Hao Lo, MD, MBA. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Emergency Radiology, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Guests: Frank Levy, PhD. Daniel Rose Professor (Emeritus) at MIT.
Max P. Rosen, MD, MPH. Professor and Chair, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
References:
Levy, Frank, and Max P. Rosen. "How Radiologists Are Paid: An Economic History, Part II: Advanced Imaging and Radiologists’ Incomes." Journal of the American College of Radiology (2020). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacr.2020.02.013 .
Levy, Frank, and Max P. Rosen. "How Radiologists Are Paid: An Economic History, Part III: The Bubble Years." Journal of the American College of Radiology (2020). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacr.2020.02.012 .
Remus, Dana and Levy, Frank S., Can Robots Be Lawyers? Computers, Lawyers, and the Practice of Law (November 27, 2016). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2701092 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2701092
From The ViewBox
Topic: Imaging of Acute Trauma, Solid Organ Injury
Summary: In this episode, we continue a discussion of imaging acute trauma. This part emphasizes the imaging of solid organ injury. The organs discussed are the liver, spleen, kidney, pancreas, adrenal gland and gallbladder. We focus on recent changes in diagnostic criteria since 2018 and their significance in the daily diagnosis and management of trauma patients.
Host: Christopher Cerniglia, DO, ME, FAOCR. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Musculoskeletal Imaging & Intervention, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Guest: Hao Lo, MD, MBA. Associate Professor of Radiology, Division of Emergency Radiology, UMMS Dept of Radiology.
Resources:
Kozar, R. A., Crandall, M., Shanmuganathan, K., Zarzaur, B. L., Coburn, M., Cribari, C., & AAST Patient Assessment Committee. (2018). Organ injury scaling 2018 update: spleen, liver, and kidney. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, 85(6), 1119-1122.
AAST Injury Scoring Scale. https://www.aast.org/resources-detail/injury-scoring-scale
Lee, J. T., Slade, E., Uyeda, J., Steenburg, S. D., Chong, S. T., Tsai, R.,& LeBedis, C. A. (2021). American Society of Emergency Radiology Multicenter Blunt Splenic Trauma Study: CT and Clinical Findings. Radiology, 202917.