Mark J. Garcia, M.D., conducted the procedure at EndoVascular Consultants in Wilmington, Delaware. He used the Embolization coil to treat the patient's painful pelvic varices and chronic pelvic pain ...
World Radiology Day 2025 celebrates advances in interventional radiology that enable healing without cutting. These innovations are transforming patient care by preserving organs and reducing recovery ...
NEW YORK — Bruce Tempone is undergoing treatment for varicose veins in his legs. In the past this would have required surgery, including a day in the hospital and weeks of recovery. But with the help ...
University of Tennessee project aims for fully insertable wireless robotic imaging device. The funding from the National ...
Sovato has completed a Series B financing round to accelerate the development of its teleoperated robotic surgery system, ...
Doctors said that craniosynostosis is a rare skull disorder in newborns in India, that can now be successfully treated with surgery based on 3-D imaging. "With one in 2,000 to 2,500 infants being ...
Breast cancer patients frequently undergo imaging like mammograms or ultrasounds between their first breast cancer-related doctor visit and surgery to remove the tumor. Evaluations of these scans help ...
The UCSF Spine Center recently acquired a new imaging system that will assist surgeons in navigation techniques and help the center expand and enhance surgical procedures. The technology is the first ...
Some neurosurgeons are using a new approach to visualize the brain’s delicate anatomy prior to surgery. The novel technique allows neurosurgeons to see the brain’s nerve connections thus preserving ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . SARASOTA, Fla. — At this year’s American Glaucoma Society meeting, presenters reported on a portable, ...
Ethiopia: Researchers have reported a rare case of a sigmoid gallbladder in a 38-year-old woman with gallstone disease. The ...
An advanced imaging approach developed at the University of Virginia School of Medicine could let surgeons determine the best target in the brain to stop epilepsy seizures, new research suggests.