News Announcements

Daniel Arteaga awarded RSNA Research Medical Student Grant

Daniel Arteaga, B.A., Class of 2015 Vanderbilt Medical School, has recently been named a recipient of the Research Medical Student Grant awarded by the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA). This grant is awarded on an annual basis to medical students pursuing research in the field of radiology.

Radiology welcomes Adam Guttentag, MD

Adam Guttentag, M.D., has joined the faculty in the Chest and Body Imaging sections of the Department of Radiology effective April 1, 2014. Dr. Guttentag graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1985. He served a transitional year at Mercy Hospital Pittsburgh, PA, and was a resident in Diagnostic Radiology at Boston University Medical Center, graduating in 1990. He was a Thoracic Radiology fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital in 1990-91.  He was given board certification in Diagnostic Radiology by the ABR in 1990.

Celebration for Tom Dina, Radiology Residency Program Director

On March 8, 2014, past and current residents of the Vanderbilt Radiology Residency Program gathered to honor their mentor on the eve of his retirement after 19 years as program director. Dr. Thomas S. Dina joined the faculty at Vanderbilt in 1994 and became program director in 1995; his impending retirement caps a 40-year career in neuroradiology.  Over the span of his career at Vanderbilt, Dr. Dina has trained 165 residents and 32 fellows in neuroradiology.

Interventional Oncology at Vanderbilt University

At the 2014 Symposium on Clinical Interventional Oncology (CIO), Dr. Dan Brown, presented information about therapies for neuroendocrine tumors. Interventional Oncology 360 interviewed Dr. Brown about the interventional oncology therapies provided at Vanderbilt University as well as his CIO presentation. Q: How did you become involved in the interventional oncology specialty?

3-D Emaging Enhances Options for Breast Cancer Screening

The Vanderbilt Breast Center at Vanderbilt Health One Hundred Oaks has added tomosynthesis mammography, an imaging technique that creates a three-dimensional image of breast tissue, to help screen patients for breast cancer. While a standard mammogram machine takes a static picture from above the breast, the tomosynthesis tube moves over the breast in an arc.