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Training Collections
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Sale 25% OffPractice-focused training programs designed to help you gain experience in a specific subspecialty area.
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Complete all of your state CME requirements in one convenient place.
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Get a free weekly case delivered right to your inbox.
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Dr. Resnick's MSK Conference
Learn directly from the MSK Master himself.
Lower Extremities MRI Conference
Musculoskeletal Imaging
Emergency Imaging
PET Imaging
Pediatric Imaging
For Training Programs
Supplement your training program with case-based learning for residents, registrars, fellows, and more.
For Private Practices
Upskill in high growth, advanced imaging areas.
Compliance
NewTrack, fulfill, and report on all your radiologists' credentialing and licensing requirements.
Emergency Call Prep
Prepare trainees to be on call for the emergency department with this specialized training series.
14 topics, 1 hr.
Intro To Screening (Breast)
1 m.Indications for Screening (Breast)
4 m.Screening Mammography – Background
6 m.Tomosynthesis (Screening)
8 m.Indications for Screening Ultrasound
3 m.Indications for Screening MRI
3 m.Normal Breast Anatomy (Screening)
5 m.Lesion Localization and Detection
8 m.Search Pattern (Screening)
6 m.Commonly Missed Areas (Screening)
4 m.Screening Ultrasound (Breast)
5 m.Screening MRI (Breast)
6 m.Computer Aided Detection (Screening)
3 m.Breast Cancer Risk Factors
6 m.0:01
Next, I would like to talk about,
0:03
Indications for Screening Ultrasound.
0:05
And these are the indications according to the Society of Breast Imaging.
0:10
Indications include average-risk women
0:13
with dense breasts as an adjunct to mammography.
0:16
Screening ultrasound should never be performed in isolation,
0:20
or high-risk women for who qualify for MRI screening but cannot have an MRI.
0:27
So somebody with a pacemaker, for example,
0:29
somebody with an allergy to gadolinium, or other reasons,
0:33
some kind of metal foreign body inside of their body
0:36
that they cannot have MRI.
0:38
Screening Breast Ultrasound.
0:40
The sensitivity of mammography and dense breasts ranges from about 47.8% to 64.4%
0:47
In non dense breasts, the sensitivity is upwards of 85%
0:51
Patients with dense breasts have
0:53
an increased risk of developing breast cancer.
0:55
Thus, we need a better way to screen them.
0:57
Screening Breast Ultrasound has been shown
0:59
to detect an additional three to four cancers per thousand women screened.
1:04
So there are two ways to perform Screening Breast Ultrasound.
1:07
It can be performed with Handheld
1:09
Screening Breast Ultrasound versus ABUS, Automated Breast Ultrasound.
1:14
Handheld Ultrasound is operator dependent
1:17
and time-consuming, and it also requires extensive training.
1:21
This is an image from a Handheld Screening Breast Ultrasound that found a cancer.
1:25
Automated Breast Ultrasound is standardized, reproducible
1:30
and operator independent.
1:32
It's quick, however, the downside is it's prone to artifacts.
1:36
But on a plus side,
1:37
you get to see the breast in multiple planes and it requires less training.
1:42
Both have equivalent rates of breast cancer detection.
1:45
Over here is an example of what an ABUS looks like,
1:48
and we can see this black defect in the tissue here.
1:51
And when you go to the orthogonal view on ultrasound,
1:55
you can see there's a regular mask that looks very similar to a handheld version.
1:59
And that is all for indications for screening breast ultrasound.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
Next, I would like to talk about,
0:03
Indications for Screening Ultrasound.
0:05
And these are the indications according to the Society of Breast Imaging.
0:10
Indications include average-risk women
0:13
with dense breasts as an adjunct to mammography.
0:16
Screening ultrasound should never be performed in isolation,
0:20
or high-risk women for who qualify for MRI screening but cannot have an MRI.
0:27
So somebody with a pacemaker, for example,
0:29
somebody with an allergy to gadolinium, or other reasons,
0:33
some kind of metal foreign body inside of their body
0:36
that they cannot have MRI.
0:38
Screening Breast Ultrasound.
0:40
The sensitivity of mammography and dense breasts ranges from about 47.8% to 64.4%
0:47
In non dense breasts, the sensitivity is upwards of 85%
0:51
Patients with dense breasts have
0:53
an increased risk of developing breast cancer.
0:55
Thus, we need a better way to screen them.
0:57
Screening Breast Ultrasound has been shown
0:59
to detect an additional three to four cancers per thousand women screened.
1:04
So there are two ways to perform Screening Breast Ultrasound.
1:07
It can be performed with Handheld
1:09
Screening Breast Ultrasound versus ABUS, Automated Breast Ultrasound.
1:14
Handheld Ultrasound is operator dependent
1:17
and time-consuming, and it also requires extensive training.
1:21
This is an image from a Handheld Screening Breast Ultrasound that found a cancer.
1:25
Automated Breast Ultrasound is standardized, reproducible
1:30
and operator independent.
1:32
It's quick, however, the downside is it's prone to artifacts.
1:36
But on a plus side,
1:37
you get to see the breast in multiple planes and it requires less training.
1:42
Both have equivalent rates of breast cancer detection.
1:45
Over here is an example of what an ABUS looks like,
1:48
and we can see this black defect in the tissue here.
1:51
And when you go to the orthogonal view on ultrasound,
1:55
you can see there's a regular mask that looks very similar to a handheld version.
1:59
And that is all for indications for screening breast ultrasound.
Report
Description
Faculty
Carolynn M DeBenedectis, MD
Associate Professor of Radiology
University of Massachusetts Medical School
Tags
Women's Health
Ultrasound
Oncologic Imaging
Non-infectious Inflammatory
Neoplastic
Idiopathic
Gynecologic (GYN)
Breast
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