View allAll Photos Tagged MedicalImaging

Monica Kanney (Naperville)

Project: Ovarian Dermoid Cysts

Adair Ladin (Naperville)

Project: Syndactyly and Polydactyly

Within the framework of Art & Science, the Fraunhofer Institute for Image-Based Medicine MEVIS and the media artist Yen Tzu Chang (JP) conducted a workshop for pupils at the Ars Electronica Center in June 2017.

 

Credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

Nearly 60 students from the College of DuPage Diagnostic Medical Imaging programs in Mammography, Nuclear Medicine, Radiography and Sonography displayed and discussed their work featuring a variety of diseases and pathologies that have been detected using various imaging procedures.

 

(Photos by Mike McKissack/COD News Bureau)

Evelyn Alanis (West Chicago)

Project: Agenesis of the Corpus Callosum

Image:Axial view (bottom up) of a normal level without disc herniation.

  

Joanne Pikul (Downers Grove)

Project: Tetrology of Fallot

Within the framework of Art & Science, the Fraunhofer Institute for Image-Based Medicine MEVIS and the media artist Yen Tzu Chang (JP) conducted a workshop for pupils at the Ars Electronica Center in June 2017.

 

Credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair

scanning courtesy of the Everett Clinic. After the scan I went straight to the hospital, where my appendix ruptured while waiting for hospital transport to take me to the OR. Had to stay in the hospital a week with a JP drain (GROSS!!) to get the infected muck out.

Pam Ward (Countryside)

Project: Intussusception

Shari Aparo (Downers Grove)

Project: Abdominal Aortic Aneurism

I have had OCT scans of my retina and optic nerve, but this technique is also applied to imaging of the cornea as shown above. Scan is part of a final checkup before lamellar corneal transplantation in a few weeks.

 

See also eyewiki.aao.org/Anterior_Segment_Optical_Coherence_Tomogr... for a further description of this technology.

Rogan-Delft Product Manager Menno Timmer attracts attention with Zillion PACS workstation using Eizo displays and the Matrox Xenia Pro board.

Brittany Owens (Aurora)

Project: Asphyxiating Thoracic Dystrophy

Misericordia University medical imaging major Stephanie Piser of Middletown, Del., poses for a picture next to her research poster at Student Research Poster Presentation Day in Sandy and Marlene Insalaco Hall.

Marlo Santos (Darien)

Project: Proteus Syndrome

Misericordia University medical imaging major Kristen Kabacinski of Duryea, Pa., poses for a picture next to her research poster at Student Research Poster Presentation Day in Sandy and Marlene Insalaco Hall.

Because he has alzheimer's, his jokes about no pets in the pet scan were taken literally, and nobody (but me) laughed. So much for humor.

Kevin Feifer, right, presents the award to Patrick Smith. Misericordia University recently presented Patrick Smith of McAdoo, Pa., with the Service-Learning Leadership Award at the annual Honors and Awards Ceremony in Lemmond Theater in Walsh Hall on campus. The award is given to a student who is nominated by a faculty member for community-based work initiated in a service-learning course and who shows evidence of active community service and the potential for continued service in a leadership role.

Magnetic resonance inaging (MRI) scan of my head. This was taken in the same scanning session as the vertical section. Yes, I was in that infernal machine for well over 20 minutes. The machine makes a pounding, jackhammering noise as it scans, which is not pleasant when you're as sick as I was here.

 

You can see here how the Staphylococcus aureus infection in my sinus cavity has caused one eyeball to protrude, because of the mass of blood clotting and swollen tissue behind it. You can also the see the asymmetry in the sinus cavities.

 

The infection ate away the nerves controlling my eye muscles. Thankfully it didn't eat away the optic nerve itself, or any of my brain tissue. My eyesight was unaffected in any acuity sense, but I couldn't control where my eyes were pointing. I was crosseyed, and remained so until the muscle-controlling nerves regrew, which took almost a year. My eyes could not point in the same direction, so I had double vision for about 8 months and had to wear an eyepatch over one eye so that I could function normally.

 

I've since recovered control of my eyes.

 

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Misericordia University medical imaging major Stephanie Jugus of Laflin, Pa., poses for a picture next to her research poster at Student Research Poster Presentation Day in Sandy and Marlene Insalaco Hall.

I totally fell from a curb yesterday evening. When I couldn't put on my pants or shoes this morning, much less straighten my leg, I went to the ER. It is not broken, only angry and swollen.

 

Yeah, I really do have one! Image from MRI scan.

 

MRI by Woodville Diagnostic Imaging, Adelaide.

Fundus camera photo of the retina of my left eye. Taken by an optometrist.

 

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Dr. Glen Tellis poses with his students: Maria Kidron, Haley Ellis, Mary Baran, Kearston Healey

I totally fell from a curb yesterday evening. When I couldn't put on my pants or shoes this morning, much less straighten my leg, I went to the ER. It is not broken, only angry and swollen.

 

Fundus camera photo of the retina of my right eye. Taken by an optometrist.

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

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