MELBOURNE, Oct. 1 (Xinhua) -- Australian researchers have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) tool that detects tiny brain lesions causing severe epilepsy in children, enabling faster diagnosis, ...
Melbourne researchers test a new AI tool that detects tiny lesions in children with epilepsy, leading to surgeries that leave ...
An advanced AI tool can detect tiny brain lesions that cause severe epilepsy in children, allowing faster diagnosis, more ...
Patients with drug-resistant epilepsy who show no abnormalities on MRI are less likely to achieve seizure freedom following surgery.
An artificial intelligence tool that can detect tiny, hard-to-spot brain malformations in children with epilepsy could help ...
An artificial intelligence tool that can detect tiny, hard-to-spot brain malformations in children with epilepsy could help ...
A new MRI technique developed at the University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, could improve the detection of brain lesions responsible for focal epilepsy. The new method offers greater precision ...
Dec. 20, 2002 — Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed and reported by epilepsy specialty centers are significantly more accurate than standard MRIs, according to a report in the December issue of ...
A new MRI technique can help find hard-to-detect brain lesions that are causing epileptic seizures The technique rings the brain with multiple powerful transmitters, to enhance the image and reduce ...
A new technique has enabled ultra-powerful magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners to identify tiny differences in patients' brains that cause treatment-resistant epilepsy. In the first study to use ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
AI tool detects tiny brain lesions to improve epilepsy treatment in children
An advanced AI tool can detect tiny brain lesions that cause severe epilepsy in children, allowing faster diagnosis, more precise treatment and a potential cure, according to a new study.
Previously, 7T MRI scanners have suffered from signal blackspots in crucial parts of the brain, most commonly in the temporal lobes, where most cases of epilepsy arise. To overcome these blackspots, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results