Researchers at the University of Southern California recently used CT scanners and medical-grade 3D printers to conduct virtual autopsies on Egyptian mummies.
Each mummy was scanned in its sarcophagus, which weighs about 200 pounds. Then 3D models of the two Egyptian priests were constructed — and you can see them at the California Science Center.
USC radiologists unraveled some of ancient history’s mysteries recently when they conducted full-body CT scans of two Egyptian mummies whose bodies have been preserved for more than 2,200 years. Keck ...
CT scans used by Keck Medicine of USC have revealed health secrets in two ancient Egyptian priests, offering insight into ancient life.
In a prospective imaging study of 200 adults with lung cancer, photon-counting CT reduced radiation exposure, yielded fewer ...
The Centra Foundation was awarded a $450,000 grant from Al Stroobants Foundation to help fund a new cardiac PET/CT scanner at ...
A new bioarchaeological study has identified what researchers describe as the first known case of deliberate mummification applied to a child sacrificed during the Inca capacocha ritual. The finding ...
Keck Medicine of USC radiologists use computed tomography (CT) scanners to diagnose and treat patients' diseases and injuries. Recently, however, this advanced technology was put to a far more novel ...
N Plus offers exposure to solar, commercial space, and medical imaging through high-purity semiconductor compounds and ...
“It really tells us that infants are interacting with the world in a lot more complex of a way than we might imagine,” said ...
A step-by-step, evidence-informed framework for interpreting high coronary calcium CT results, refining cardiovascular risk, ...