View in browser

Header

Slowly, but inevitably pathology is going digital – the number of advantages over working with analogue glass slides is increasing almost daily: high-capacity analysis beyond the capability of the human eye, improved remote functionalities (a favourite especially during COVID-19) and AI implementation, to name just a few. However, the road to digitalisation can be a rocky one, as pioneering labs will attest.

Enjoy browsing!

Article • Tissue analysis

Infrared spectroscopy as a diagnostic tool

New techniques of infrared-based technology are showing strong potential for cost-effective tissue analysis. Peter Gardner, Professor of Analytical and Biomedical Spectroscopy at the University of Manchester, outlined how hyperspectral imaging ...

Sponsored • Going digital

How digital pathology is shaping the future of precision medicine

In recent years, technological and regulatory advances have made digital pathology a viable alternative to the conventional microscope. The obtention of a digital replica of the traditional glass slide and its use for primary diagnosis has ...

Sponsored • Histology/cytology equipment

Optimise pathology workflow with Hamamatsu whole slide imaging solutions

Hamamatsu Photonics understand the benefits and challenges of whole slide imaging systems. For over 15 years, we have been working to deliver robust and reliable scanners with optimal image quality. Our NanoZoomer whole slide scanner series quickly ...

Article • A more integrative approach to digital pathology

imCMS: The door to simple, cheap, reliable bio-stratification

Bringing molecular and digital pathology closer together through a more integrative approach can lead to clear advantages for diagnostic and research workflows. During the recent Digital Pathology and AI Congress (London), Professor Viktor Koelzer ...

Article • Need for modernisation

Digital pathology: Luxury or necessity?

The anatomical pathologist faces a crisis. Public and private labs suffer increasing caseloads, whilst pathologist numbers diminish for various reasons, including greater cancer prevalence associated with aging populations as well as improved cancer ...

Article • Lab medicine in the Netherlands

Digital pathology: From over-promising to a reality check

Almost five years ago, the plan to implement a wide-ranging digital pathology approach across the Netherlands began to take shape. As more labs across the country acquire digital pathology capability, with steps to create a strong and accessible ...

Article • High-capacity digital image analysis

Spatial statistics extract subvisual features

Spatial analytics offers greater clarity in the assessment of tumours beyond routine microscopic analysis. High-capacity digital image analysis enables new methods of spatial statistics to extract features not immediately distinguishable by visual ...

Article • Overcoming the barriers to AI in digital pathology

‘You can’t do AI on glass slides’

As Artificial Intelligence continues to impact on the development of digital pathology, potential users are still slow to implement key enabling technologies to harness the benefits, according to Dr David McClintock, who will detail critical steps ...

 

You are receiving this email because you subscribed to our newsletter on healthcare-in-europe

If you don’t want to receive this newsletter anymore, click here to unsubscribe.

Keep up-to-date on the latest news from all hospital-related fields!
Subscribe to our bi-monthly newsletter.

Copyright © 2024 mgo fachverlage GmbH & Co. KG.
All rights reserved.

E.-C.-Baumann-Straße 5, 95326 Kulmbach, Germany

email: newsletter@european-hospital.com

Facebook
Twitter
RSS-Feed