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      • X-ray technology revolutionized medicine by providing a way to view interior structures of the human body without invasive or exploratory surgical procedures, giving new insights into injury and disease, and allowing for thoughtful planning before treatment.
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  2. May 26, 2024 · Little did anyone know that a serendipitous discovery by a German physicist named Wilhelm Röntgen would soon revolutionize the way doctors diagnose and treat patients. This is the story of how X-rays were discovered and how they transformed the medical landscape forever.

  3. Nov 6, 2015 · One hundred and twenty years ago, W. C. Röntgen discovered it was possible to use a new kind of ray to X-ray or "roentgenize" people and things. It was a chance find that transformed clinical ...

  4. Diagnostic X-rays, discovered in 1895 by Wilhelm Roentgen, revolutionised medical diagnostics, allowing non-invasive internal body examinations.

  5. Sep 17, 2015 · And while X-rays remain a cornerstone of modern medicine, their discovery paved the way for the development of today’s broad spectrum of imaging techniques, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), ultrasound, echocardiography, and many others -- some of which avoid the use of radiation altogether.

    • The Discovery of The X-Ray
    • X-Ray’S Early Contribution to Medicine
    • Discovering The Dangers of X-Ray
    • X-Ray Advancements
    • Beyond The X-Ray

    In 1895, Wilhelm Roentgen, a professor of physics in Bavaria, was working on an experiment with cathode ray tubes to learn if cathode rays could travel through a vacuum tube. He applied a high voltage to the tube and noticed that the positive and negative electrodes within the tube caused it to emit light. He then covered the tube with black paper ...

    A year after Roentgen’s discovery, in 1896, Dr. Edwin Frost and his brother, Dr. Gilman Frost, were the first to take a diagnostic X-ray. They X-rayed a boy named Eddie McCarthy to diagnose a broken wrist. Also in 1896, Emil Grubbe of Chicago is thought to be the first to use radiation to treat cancer; he successfully treated a woman with breast ca...

    It was during Edison’s research that the dangers of X-rays were discovered. Clarence Dally, a glassblower who worked with Edison, would X-ray his own hands to test X-ray tubes. Eventually, he had both of his arms amputated due to cancer, and he died of X-ray exposure in 1904. From then on, Edison wasn’t fond of the technology and stopped his resear...

    Refinements and advances in equipment design since 1920 have made X-rays much safer for patients and technicians. Today’s films use chemicals that make them more sensitive to X-rays, so they require less time and less radiation to create an image. The most sensitive of these screens use rare-earth metals. All radiology technicians now wear lead apr...

    Interestingly, when word traveled about the x-ray back in 1895, it created such a sensation that people were using it more for photographic than medical purposes. Anyone could create a cathode ray tube and take photos with it. And many people did. Photographers set up on the street to take X-rays of passersby. Shoe merchants even used an X-ray mach...

  6. X-ray technology revolutionized medicine by providing a way to view interior structures of the human body without invasive or exploratory surgical procedures, giving new insights into injury and disease, and allowing for thoughtful planning before treatment.

  7. Jul 19, 2024 · The discovery of X-rays – a form of invisible radiation that can pass through objects, including human tissue – revolutionised science and medicine in the late 19th century. Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (1845-1923), a German scientist, discovered X-rays or Röntgen rays in November 1895.

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