Week in Review: MRI reveals brain waste-clearing pathways | FES-PET for breast cancer patients | Is ChatGPT 'overly cautious'?

Dear AuntMinnie Member,

Our most popular article this week was our coverage of a study that showed how MRI illuminates the brain's waste-clearing pathways -- and how this information could influence patients' lifestyle choices. Click here for the full story.

In our second most-read article, a team from South Korea reported that FES-PET improves the management of breast cancer patients, while the third most-clicked story explored the question of whether ChatGPT is "overly cautious" when it comes to recommending emergency imaging.

Readers were also drawn to our fourth article of the week, which outlined research regarding the use of 7-tesla brain MRI to track the long-term effects of severe COVID-19. Also of interest to AuntMinnie members was a Medscape report that suggested that Canadian physicians are wary of AI.

Finally, in the southeastern U.S., many are facing the aftermath of Hurricane Milton, which hit the Florida coast on October 9. We contacted three hospitals in the Tampa area and spoke to a representative from Tampa General about the effect Milton has had on imaging operations.

See below for the full list of our top stories of the week:

  1. MRI reveals brain-waste clearing pathways
  2. FES-PET improves management of breast cancer patients
  3. ChatGPT 'overly cautious' in prescribing emergency imaging
  4. 7-tesla MRI uncovers long-term effects of severe COVID-19
  5. Canadian physicians wary of AI
  6. Tampa-area imaging services impacted by Hurricane Milton
  7. Was the LAPD MRI incident really the result of a lack of MRI safety?
  8. NNSA's Mo-99 program: A bumpy ride
  9. Extracardiac findings common on CT, MRI
  10. Microsoft unveils new healthcare AI offerings
  11. Optimized ChatGPT Turbo passes radiology board-style exam
  12. Federal grand jury indicts 2 in $54M alleged imaging center fraud
  13. Adding radiology report info to DL model helps MRI detect brain lesions
  14. Caution needed when using LDCT with CAD systems for kids 

Kate Madden Yee
Senior Editor
AuntMinnie.com

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