http://info.med.yale.edu/intmed/cardio/imaging/contents.html
-Yale University Cardiothoracic
Imaging website
-comprehensive review and learning module for imaging the heart
-start with extensive review of normal anatomy, and each review supplemented
by multimedia of echocardiograms, angiograms, etc.
-reviews echo, other ways to image the heart, important lung and cardiac
findings, again with extensive multimedia support
-also covers bones, soft tissues, mammography and has multiple cases
with diagnosis given, but no ability to do unknown cases
-good resource for residents and medical students
|
http://www.med-ed.virginia.edu/courses/rad/
-University of Virginia
website that provides interactive tutorials for different
areas
-cervical spine, ICU chest films, intro to head CT, emergency body CT,
informed consent and patient confidentiality tutorials
-all interactive with opportunity for self-assessment
|
http://www.chestx-ray.com/Education/Education.html
-tutorial website for reading
chest x-rays
-slide based lectures along with anatomy and physiology tutorials
-multimedia used for tutorials, some interactivity-slow server speed,
downloads can take some time
|
http://www.learningradiology.com
- Albert Einstein Medical
Center Radiology teaching resources
- aimed at medical students and radiology residents-in-training
- includes online PowerPoint lectures, handouts, images, and flashcards
primarily in the areas of chest, GI, cardiac, and bone radiology
- good resource for beginning residents and medical students
|
http://www.sbu.ac.uk/~dirt/museum/topics.html
-Educational radiology website
from Central Middlesex Hospital (London)
-tutorial for reading CXRs include viewing strategies, list of anatomical
features, discussion on lung structure and function, etc.
-all are text-based discussion with thumbnail images interspersed to
illustrate points
-also a introductory tutorial on basics of ultrasound, again text-based-no
self-assessment
|
http://www.radiology.wisc.edu/Med_Students/neuroradiology/NeuroRad/NeuroRad.htm
-tutorial for neuroradiology;
covers neuroanatomy, vascular anatomy, neurofunctional
systems, MRI & CT.
-Has video files run through Windows Media Player that goes through anatomical
images
|
http://www.med.wayne.edu/diagRadiology/Anatomy_Modules/Page1.html
-radiographically based
anatomy modules for brain, upper abdomen, thorax and
pelvis-anatomy is taught from plain films and CT along
with text-based explanations
-slow server and no opportunity for self-assessment
|
http://www.rad.washington.edu/anatomy
-MSK anatomy tutorials taught
from radiographs
-mostly text-based with images throughout to illustrate points
-some interactivity: can click on a structure to find out what it is;
can also watch some extremity CT/MRI as Quicktime movie
-no opportunity for self-assessment
|
http://everest.radiology.uiowa.edu/nlm/app/livertoc/liver/liver.html
-University of Iowa website
through Department of Surgery for learning the segmental
anatomy of the liver
-text-based discussion with thumbnail images and some Quicktime movies
to demonstrate the segmental anatomy in three dimensions
-from a primarily surgical as opposed to radiographic standpoint
-mostly resident level
|
http://www.ob-ultrasound.net
-tutorial webpage for OB
ultrasound
-mostly text-based comprehensive review of the basics of OB ultrasound
-linked to many different pictures, images, and teaching files of different
diseases, equipment, anatomy and basic ultrasound physics
-some of the links are dead, but the majority are still working
-not interactive, no opportunity for self-assessment
|
http://www.vh.org/Providers/Lectures/icmrad/Opening.html
-online textbook for introductory
radiology
-4 sections: chest, nuclear, skeletal and abdominal radiography
-clicking on a section brings up text-based lectures with clickable thumbnails
to illustrate certain points
-not very interactive, no self-assessment available
|
http://www.radiology.co.uk/srs-x/tutorials.htm
-Scottish Radiological Society
educational resource page
-provides text-based tutorials for lobar collapse, head CT in trauma
and renal transplant
-concepts are basic (except for renal transplant) and explained well
with diagrams, but absolutely no interactivity in the tutorials
|
http://www.mritutor.org/mritutor
-a website designed to provide
a tutorial in the basics of MRI
-tutorial is primarily text-based with some simple diagrams and also
some thumbnail images of MRI scans to illustrate certain points
-covers instrumentations, pulse sequences, artifacts, safety, contrast
and more
-not interactive, no self-assessment; still, one of the very few tutorials
on MRI
|