Radiolog
All for a shadow that was never a threat.
🧠Up to 40% of whole-body CTs reveal an “incidental finding”—a spot on the liver, a thyroid nodule, an adrenal bump. Most are benign. But which one isn’t? We now face a crisis of overdiagnosis . We find things that would never cause harm, but once seen, they can’t be unseen. That tiny lung nodule? It might vanish on its own. But guidelines say: scan again in 6 months. Then maybe biopsy. Then maybe surgery.
Here’s an interesting, thought-provoking post about radiology, written in a style that balances insight with accessibility—perfect for LinkedIn, a blog, or a medical newsletter. The Radiologist’s Paradox: Seeing More, But Knowing Less? radiolog
🤖 AI algorithms are incredible at spotting what humans miss. But they also flag more false positives. Radiology is becoming a game of “find the lesion” — but we’re losing the art of asking “Does this lesion matter to the patient?”
#Radiology #MedicalImaging #Overdiagnosis #AIinMedicine #MedEd All for a shadow that was never a threat
We think of radiology as the ultimate “window into the body.” But here’s the quiet truth: the clearer our images get, the harder the questions become.
👇 What’s your experience? Have you or a patient ever been down the “incidentaloma” rabbit hole? But which one isn’t
And that’s where the paradox hits.
fĂĽr Tiere