Showing posts with label AI diagnostic uses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AI diagnostic uses. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Doctors Thought It Was Asthma. A.I. Flagged a Serious Heart Problem.; The New York Times, June 22, 2026

 , The New York Times; Doctors Thought It Was Asthma. A.I. Flagged a Serious Heart Problem.

"Luckily for Mr. Quiros, that emergency room is part of NewYork-Presbyterian’s medical system. Researchers were analyzing all electrocardiograms done on patients in that medical system with an A.I. program, EchoNext, to see if it could find patterns in the scans indicating damage to the heart — patterns a human would not detect.

It’s part of a clinical trial evaluating the A.I. program, which was developed there by Dr. Pierre Elias, medical director of A.I. and cardiologist at NewYork-Presbyterian and Columbia University Irving Medical Center, and his colleagues. Dr. Elias says EchoNext reads an ECG less than 10 minutes after it is performed, and that they analyze nearly 500,000 ECGs a year. Dr. Elias has started a company, Pathway Labs, to market it...

The hope is not that A.I. will replace doctors, but that it could be a tool to augment their skills and flag overlooked medical issues."

Thursday, June 18, 2026

AI helped diagnose 18 children whose rare diseases had stumped doctors; NBC News, June 18, 2026

 Hallie Jackson, NBC News; AI helped diagnose 18 children whose rare diseases had stumped doctors

"New research from Boston Children's Hospital’s center for rare diseases and the AI company OpenAI reveals that off-the-shelf AI tools can help identify which errors in patients’ genomes might be causing the children’s diseases. NBC News' Jared Perlo discusses the findings of the research."