Week in Review: AIUM, SNMMI coverage | MRI maps brain fluid flow | Overconfidence in medical decision-making

Dear AuntMinnie member:

It's conference season, and here at AuntMinnie we're out and about learning about new research and trends in medical imaging. The American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM) annual meeting has been ongoing this week in Philadelphia, while the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) annual meeting began May 30 in Los Angeles. (Access our full coverage of SNMMI on our ShowCast -- starting with a video interview with current SNMMI president Jean-Luc Urbain, MD, PhD, on how the meeting is putting "science in the spotlight.")

In fact, AIUM coverage piqued readers' interest this week, especially an interview with current AIUM president David Jones, MD, on ultrasound's evolving role and our coverage of a keynote delivered by Alison Noble of the University of Oxford in England on the use of AI with ultrasound. Also of interest to AuntMinnie members were articles that reported on presentations regarding point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) in pediatric ICUs and how ultrasound helps find nanoplastics in endometrial polyps.

Finally, two other popular articles this week highlighted research on an AI-powered MRI technique that maps brain fluid flow associated with Alzheimer's and how to mitigate overconfidence in medical decision-making.

Here's the full list of our top stories: 

  1. AIUM president talks annual meeting, ultrasound's evolving role
  2. AIUM keynote: AI has evolving role in ultrasound
  3. AIUM: Attitudes on POCUS use in pediatric ICUs vary among departments
  4. AIUM: Ultrasound helps find nanoplastics in endometrial polyps
  5. AI-powered MRI technique maps brain fluid flow tied to Alzheimer's
  6. Study highlights overconfidence in medical decision-making
  7. Fat deposits found on pre-pandemic CT exams predict COVID-19 severity
  8. AI diagnostic aid helps novice MRI readers, but experts not so much
  9. Ultrasound MinnieCast, Episode 9: Training updates in CEUS
  10. Amyloid PET positivity rates differ by ethnoracial group

Kate Madden Yee
Senior Editor
AuntMinnie.com

 

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