Artificial intelligence could serve as backup to radiologists' eyes
"Everybody has a different trigger threshold for what they would call normal and what they would call disease," said U. Joseph Schoepf, M.D., director of cardiovascular imaging for MUSC Health and assistant dean for clinical research in the Medical University of South Carolina College of Medicine. And until recently, scans of damaged lungs have been a moot point, he said. "In the past, if you lost lung tissue, that was it. The lung tissue was gone, and there was very little you could do in terms of therapy to help patients," he said. But with advancements in treatment in recent years has come an increased interest in objectively classifying the disease, Schoepf said.
Apr-28-2020, 21:27:48 GMT
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