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MRI is trending to low field magnets :
reduced costs will lead to this change 
AI will close the gap to high field 
only in remote areas 
is only temporary 
never 




 
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Wed. 17 Sep.08,
22:06

[Start of:
'mri per diem tech'
3 Replies]


 
  Category: 
Jobs

 
mri per diem tech
We need an MRI Tech trained on AIRIS II at our facility in Orange County California on a per diem basis. The shift is 4-8 pm mondays and Thursdays. If interested call steve 714-585-5380.
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Stuart Allison

Wed. 17 Sep.08,
19:20

[Reply (2 of 4) to:
'GE LX MRI Platform?'
started by: 'Stuart Allison'
on Tue. 16 Sep.08]


 
  Category: 
Devices, Scanner, Machines

 
GE LX MRI Platform?
Marty,

Thanks for the information, it is very helpful. Do you know approximately when GE switched from 5X to LX, or from LX to Excite? Is it possible to upgrade a GE MRI from LX to Excite by replacing the workstation? Thanks again for your help.
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Stuart Allison

Tue. 16 Sep.08,
12:41

[Start of:
'GE LX MRI Platform?'
3 Replies]


 
  Category: 
Devices, Scanner, Machines

 
GE LX MRI Platform?
I'm working to gain an understanding of MRI equipment, specifically GE equipment, and I'm kind of confused by some of the terms that I see associated with the scanners when they are being listed for sale. Can anybody give me a quick idea about what is being talked about when they are referring to the "LX Platform" on a GE MRI scanner? I think it might have some relationship to phased array channels, but I'm not sure. I have also seen references to the "5X Platform" and the "Excite Platform", are these mutually exclusive to the LX platform (updated/prior models?) Thanks in advance to anyone with some GE experience who can help out.
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Bridget Montgomery

Thu. 4 Sep.08,
18:28

[Reply (1 of 3) to:
'Can I work as MRI Tech w/ ARRT(MR) but no ARRT(R)?'
started by: 'john pease'
on Mon. 18 Aug.08]


 
  Category: 
Jobs

 
Can I work as MRI Tech w/ ARRT(MR) but no ARRT(R)?
John, anyone can receive MR training. Since you are a nuc med technologist registered with the ARRT you can sit for the boards for MRI as long as you have your required comps. However, you cannot substitute your Nuc med for RT. It is an advantage to have your RT before acquiring your MRI though it does not usually pay you more money. Most hospitals will not hire anyone that is not ARRT certified in radiology first and the reason is because of the contrast injections. Gadolinium as you know is considered a medication and patients with compromised renal function can have reactions that include death, not to mention the allergic reactions (rare) but do occur. I would suggest to get the OJT training and sit for your MRI boards. Being a NM tech gives you an advantage because you are already ARRT registered. Good luck to you.
Bridget RT(R)RRA MR
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john pease

Mon. 18 Aug.08,
03:49

[Start of:
'Can I work as MRI Tech w/ ARRT(MR) but no ARRT(R)?'
2 Replies]


 
  Category: 
Jobs

 
Can I work as MRI Tech w/ ARRT(MR) but no ARRT(R)?
Hello,

I am a nuclear medicine technologist (NMTCB, ARRT(N))who has the chance to get MRI training OTJ. If I complete the 120 MRI procedures at my job that the ARRT requires in order to meet my clinical competency, then the ARRT will allow me to sit for the ARRT(MRI) examination without any additional education as a post-secondary pathway.

My question regards being hired: is it possible to get hired with an ARRT(N) and ARRT(MRI) to do MRI? Can the ARRT(N) be substituted for the ARRT(R) which it seems many if not most if not all places seem to want you to have (I have only looked at a few ads, but this seems to be true...)

Do hiring managers look more favorably on an MRI tech with ARRT(MRI) vs. just ARRT(R)?

Any information would be most appreciated!

Thanks!
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