Explore a collection of the most beloved and motivational quotes and sayings about Fluoroscopy. Share these powerful messages with your loved ones on social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, or on your personal blog, and inspire the world with their wisdom. We've compiled the Top 100 Fluoroscopy Quotes and Sayings from 94 influential authors, including Hans Fischer,Laozi,Daniel Kahneman,Carl Watson,George Harrison, for you to enjoy and share.

In cases of porphyria, a minor disease, the patient excretes large quantities of porphyrins. By Hans Fischer Porphyria Disease Porphyrins Cases Minor

The purest white seems stained. By Laozi Stained Purest White

Experienced radiologists who evaluate chest X-rays as "normal" or "abnormal" contradict themselves 20% of the time when they see the same picture on separate occasions. By Daniel Kahneman Normal Abnormal Xrays Experienced Contradict

There was one floor that was all gynecologists. They could tell by the remnants of weird optical contraptions- all the convoluted tools men use when they're searching for the source of their anxieties. By Carl Watson Gynecologists Floor Contraptions Anxieties Remnants

The microscopes that magnified the tears, studied warts and all. Still life flows on. By George Harrison Tears Studied Microscopes Magnified Warts

Check-ups are, in my experience, a grave mistake; all they do is allow the quack of your choice to tell you that you have some sort of complaint that you were far happier not knowing about. By John Mortimer Checkups Experience Mistake Grave Quack

Attaching a single patient's photo to a CT exam increased diagnostic accuracy by 46 percent. And roughly 80 percent of the key diagnostic findings came only when the radiologists saw the patient's photo. The radiologists missed these important findings when the photo was absent - even if they caught them three months earlier. When the radiologists saw the patient's photo, they felt more empathy. By encouraging empathy, the photos motivated the radiologists to conduct their diagnoses more carefully. Their reports were 29 percent longer when the CT exams included patient photos. When the radiologists saw a photo of a patient, they felt a stronger connection to the human impact of their work. A patient photo "makes each CT scan unique," said one radiologist. By Adam M. Grant Patient Photo Radiologists Percent Diagnostic

If the patient has been to more than four physicians, nutrition is probably the medical answer. By Abram Hoffer Physicians Nutrition Answer Patient Medical

In today's world, new infections and diseases can spread across the country and even across the world in a matter of days, or even hours, making early detection critical. By John Linder Days Hours Making Critical World

It is not possible to make a certain evaluation ... that cancer may be arrested if 'caught early'. By Hardin B. Jones Evaluation Caught Early Make Cancer

specifically to help identify By Dee Henderson Specifically Identify

But substantial X-ray treatment is impossible without transfusion!" "Then don't give it! Why do you assume you have the right to decide for someone else? Don't you agree it's a terrifying right, one that rarely leads to good? You should be careful. No one's entitled to it, not even doctors." "But doctors are entitled to that right - doctors above all," exclaimed Dontsova with deep conviction. By now she was really angry. "Without that right there'd be no such thing as medicine! By Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Xray Transfusion Substantial Treatment Impossible

Up to 10% of childhood cancers are caused by radiological examination during pregnancy. By Richard Doll Pregnancy Childhood Cancers Caused Radiological

I'll save me money, thanks. Already diagnosed meself, anyway. I'm a cactus.''Cactus? Right. Great work, there, Doc. I'm glad you're not my bloody doctor. By Bill Condon Money Save Doc Cactus Meself

It looks like frozen snot. By Lewis Francis Herreshoff Snot Frozen

I cannot believe they haven't yet come up with a better screening process than the mammogram. If a man had to put his special parts inside a clamp to test him for anything, I think they would come up with a new plan before the doctor finished saying, Put that thing there so I can crush it. By Ellen Degeneres Mammogram Screening Process Put Man

The sonogram didn't exist at the time; the spoon was the next best thing. By Jeffrey Eugenides Time Thing Sonogram Exist Spoon

I had the opportunity of making necropsies on patients dead from malignant fever and of studying the melanaemia, i.e., the formation of black pigment in the blood of patients affected by malaria. By Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran Patients Melanaemia Malaria Opportunity Making

No person knows your body better than you. The world's most sophisticated and sensitive diagnostic apparatus is your own body's feelings. By Andrew Saul Body Person Feelings World Sophisticated

Newborn screening is a public health intervention that involves a simple blood test used to identify many life-threatening genetic illnesses before any symptoms begin. By Lucille Roybal-Allard Newborn Begin Screening Public Health

A disease which new and obscure to you, Doctor, will be known only after death; and even then not without an autopsy will you examine it with exacting pains. But rare are those among the extremely busy clinicians who are willing or capable of doing this correctly. By Herman Boerhaave Doctor Death Pains Disease Obscure

Dr Dean Burk, who has spent more than fifty years in cancer research, mainly at the National Cancer Institute states: 'More people have died in the last thirty years from cancer connected with fluoridation than all the military deaths in the entire history of the United States.' By Dean Burk States Cancer Burk Dean National

OMFGEIGHTPOUNDBABYJESUSONAPOGOSTICK WHAT? By Christopher Moore Omfgeightpoundbabyjesusonapogostick

X-rays ... I am afraid of them. I stopped experimenting with them two years ago, when I came near to losing my eyesight and Dally, my assistant practically lost the use of both of his arms. By Thomas A. Edison Xrays Dally Ago Arms Afraid

No powdery residue. But definitely suspicious. Smell." He slides a makeup catalog from beneath a microscope made out of a plate, a toilet paper roll, and an intricate arrangement of pipe cleaners. "Any ideas?" I take a scientific whiff. "Gardenia. Looks like those Mary Kay terrorists are at it again. By Sarah Ockler Residue Powdery Gardenia Suspicious Smell

Examinations, sir, are pure humbug from beginning to end. If a man is a gentleman, he knows quite enough, and if he is not a gentleman, whatever he knows is bad for him. By Oscar Wilde Examinations Sir Gentleman End Pure

Some growths can be detected early, making for increased accuracy in diagnosis. Some can be cured and others controlled. By Harold E. Varmus Early Making Diagnosis Growths Detected

Stay diagnostic even as you take action. By Ronald A. Heifetz Stay Action Diagnostic

The x-ray of your skull shows a large, flobby mass floating inside. I have to consult my colleagues to be certain, but it looks like a long sausage snarled into a lump. By Benson Bruno Large Flobby Inside Xray Skull

That explains it." Actually, of course, it didn't explain anything, but whenever doctors are confused about something, which is really more frequently than any of us would do well to think about, they always snatch at something in the vicinity of the case and add, "That explains it. By William Goldman Explains Explain Add Doctors Confused

More than one skillful physician has said that if one asks the right questions, the patient will make the diagnosis for you in his or her own words. By Andrew Weil Questions Words Skillful Physician Patient

The tyranny of the blood test. By Larry Kramer Test Tyranny Blood

There are estimates that 2 to 3 percent of cancers in the U.S. each year are engendered by exposure to repetitive imaging. By Eric Topol Percent Imaging Estimates Cancers Year

One of the most widespread diseases is diagnosis. By Karl Kraus Diagnosis Widespread Diseases

There aren't any syringes." "I've got some." Red Sox came over and held a sterile pack out. When she tried to take it from him, he kept a grip on the thing. "I know you'll use this wisely." "Wisely?" She snapped the syringe out of his hand. "No, I'm going to poke him in the eye with it. Because that's what they trained me to do in medical school." Bending By J.r. Ward Wisely Sox Red Bending Thing

Lie Detector Says By Gillibran Brown Detector Lie

HH Beard has perfected ... 3 excellent (urine) cancer tests, all of proven accuracy of 95% or better ... in 1942 and onwards. By Sir Arthur Harris, 1St Baronet Beard Perfected Excellent Urine Cancer

Quiz 1. Leeuwenhoek saw microorganisms in (a) polio sufferers (b) belly button fuzz (c) malaria victims (d) dental plaque By Anonymous Quiz Leeuwenhoek Polio Sufferers Belly

Under the pathologist's microscope, life and death fight in an illuminated circle in a sort of cellular bullfight. The pathologist's job is to find the bull among the matador cells By Yann Martel Microscope Life Bullfight Pathologist Death

His practice primarily screened people's lungs for tuberculosis, which was rampant at the time. By Deepak Chopra Tuberculosis Time Practice Primarily Screened

Cellular pathology is not an end if one cannot see any alteration in the cell. Chemistry brings the clarification of living processes nearer than does anatomy. Each anatomical change must have been preceded by a chemical one. By Rudolf Virchow Cellular Cell Pathology End Alteration

Fluoride causes more human cancer, and causes it faster, than any other chemical. By Dean Burk Fluoride Cancer Faster Chemical Human

Prayerize, visualize, actualize - that is the formula for successful imaging. By Norman Vincent Peale Prayerize Visualize Actualize Imaging Formula

The contradictory experiments of chemists leave us at liberty to conclude what we please. My conclusion is, that art has not yet invented sufficient aids to enable such subtle bodies [air, light, &c.] to make a well-defined impression on organs as blunt as ours; that it is laudable to encourage investigation but to hold back conclusion. By Thomas Jefferson Contradictory Experiments Chemists Leave Liberty

Fauvism was our ordeal by fire ... colours became charges of dynamite. They were expected to charge light ... The great merit of this method was to free the picture from all imitative and conventional contact. By Andre Derain Fauvism Fire Ordeal Colours Dynamite

Fingering spots where they had been torn or punctured by boarhound teeth. By Brandon Mull Fingering Teeth Spots Torn Punctured

Doctor, feel my purse. By Jane Ace Doctor Feel Purse

See what? I didn't see anything. There were no scary people there. Nothing freaky. I'm going home now and tomorrow I'm going to have the doctors check for a brain tumor. Full battery of tests. Whole nine yard. Whatever's wrong with me, we'll find it and deal with it. At this point, my vote is either tumor or space alien testing. Either one works for me. (Geary) By Sherrilyn Kenyon Geary Tumor Freaky Full Tests

a Dr. Mikovitz. He says you left a message this morning with one of his colleagues." "Oh, of course." Maura picked up the phone. "This is Dr. Isles." Jane turned her gaze back to the X ray, to those three parallel nicks on the cheekbones. She tried to imagine what could have left such a mark. It was a tool that neither she nor Maura had encountered before. By Tess Gerritsen Mikovitz Maura Left Isles Colleagues

Examine well your blood. By William Shakespeare Examine Blood

Just heard the best word in the English language: benign. (And I don't need to see that doctor again for five years.) By Jeff Jarvis Benign English Language Heard Word

Well, I'm a bacteriologist, you know. I live in a nine-hundred-diameter microscope. I can hardly claim to take serious notice of anything that I can see with my naked eye. By Arthur Conan Doyle Bacteriologist Microscope Live Eye Claim

Colonel: Tell me what is the T.R.U.T.H, Doctor!Doctor: Total.Reveal.Using.Therapeutic.Hologram By Toba Beta Doctor Colonel

They had me on the operating table all day. They looked into my stomach, my gall bladder, they examined everything inside of me. Know what they decided? I need glasses. By Joe E. Lewis Day Operating Table Stomach Bladder

You can't expect to take a definitive image in half an hour. It takes days, often years. By Fay Godwin Hour Expect Definitive Image Half

Jaundice is the disease that your friends diagnose. By William Osler Jaundice Diagnose Disease Friends

Trust your nose, but make sure it's pointing in the right direction. By Alexander Mccall Smith Trust Nose Direction Make Pointing

I am almost inclined to coin a word and call the appearance fluorescence, from fluor-spar, as the analogous term opalescence is derived from the name of a mineral. By George Stokes Fluorescence Fluorspar Mineral Inclined Coin

How do you become someone with X-ray vision? By Carol Rifka Brunt Xray Vision

Frederick Sweet Ph.D. By Martin Marsi Sweet Frederick Phd

I am scared like you all people, that tomorrow I will be examined, that there is chance to get something bad as a result, that I will mistake in saying a word aloud or something more worst than this... By Deyth Banger People Examined Result Scared Tomorrow

When in sickness, look to the spine first. By Hippocrates Sickness Spine

When I told my doctor I couldn't afford an operation, he offered to touch-up my X-rays. By Henny Youngman Xrays Operation Told Doctor Afford

Most uses of bioassay involving smooth muscle demand high sensitivity and specificity. By John Vane Specificity Bioassay Involving Smooth Muscle

Gail, we found traces of cancer. By Lexie Dunne Gail Cancer Found Traces

Swollen in head, weak in legs, sharp in tongue but empty in belly. By Mao Zedong Swollen Head Weak Legs Sharp

The examining physician often hesitates to make the necessary examination because it involves soiling the finger. By William James Mayo Finger Examining Physician Hesitates Make

Glass flowers exploding. Slow trail of colors down the sky like stains dispersing in the sea, candescent polyps extinguished in the depths. By Cormac Mccarthy Glass Exploding Flowers Slow Sea

Don't screen unless you can do something for those patients discovered early that would produce an overall benefit to their lives. Otherwise, cease and desist. By Alan Cassels Lives Screen Patients Discovered Early

The work ... was ... so blinding that I could scarcely see afterwards, and the difficulty was increased by the fact that my microscope was almost worn out, the screws being rusted with sweat from my hands and forehead, and my only remaining eye-piece being cracked ... Fortunately invaluable oil-imraersion object-glass remained good. By Ronald Ross Work Forehead Cracked Blinding Scarcely

Once, every woman owned a small mirrored compact, and it was considered normal - sophisticated even - to flip it open to discreetly check for things like nose-glow or lipstick smudge. By Laurie Graham Compact Normal Sophisticated Smudge Woman

To know that no one before you has seen an organ you are examining, to trace relationships that have occurred to no one before, to immerse yourself in the wondrous crystalline world of the microscope, where silence reigns, circumscribed by its own horizon, a blindingly white arena - all this is so enticing that I cannot describe it. By Vladimir Nabokov Examining Microscope Reigns Circumscribed Horizon

The mark of the procedure. A real one.Lu is cured. By Lauren Oliver Procedure Mark Cured Real Onelu

I'm afraid you may have to put up with some more," I said, looking at my test tube. A thin line of precipitate had formed between the antiserum and the sample from the crime scene. "It looks like it's human blood." Deborah By Jeff Lindsay Tube Afraid Put Test Scene

Fibers in a variety of colors protrude out of my skin like mushrooms after a rainstorm. They cannot be forensically identified as animal, vegetable, or mineral. By Joni Mitchell Fibers Rainstorm Vegetable Variety Colors

In the Radiation Laboratory we count it a privilege to do everything we can to assist our medical colleagues in the application of these new tools to the problems of human suffering. By Ernest Lawrence Radiation Laboratory Suffering Count Privilege

Pain is a blunt and non-specific diagnostic instrument. By John Green Pain Instrument Blunt Nonspecific Diagnostic

The first observation of cancer cells in the smear of the uterine cervix gave me one of the greatest thrills I ever experienced during my scientific career. By Georgios Papanikolaou Career Observation Cancer Cells Smear

We are living through deeply anxious days and if we are to relieve our own anxiety we must diagnose its cause By Antoine De Saint-Exupery Living Deeply Anxious Days Relieve

The Operative tried to implement the Purusey breathing technique, which has been proven effective at fooling polygraphs. There is no conclusive evidence as towhether it is effective at masking the internal lie detectors of fifteen-year-old boys. By Ally Carter Operative Purusey Technique Polygraphs Effective

When you're asked to have a CT scan or a nuclear scan, do you know how much radiation that involves? How many of those sorts of scans have you already had? Is it necessary? Is there an alternative? I don't think many people know about that. By Eric Topol Involves Scan Asked Nuclear Radiation

We can now diagnose diseases that haven't even manifested in the patient, and may not until the fifth decade of life - if at all. By Craig Venter Patient Life Diagnose Diseases Manifested

I drink too much. The last time I gave a urine sample it had an olive in it. By Rodney Dangerfield Drink Time Gave Urine Sample

I am not one to rely upon the expert procedure. It is the psychology I seek, not the fingerprint or the cigarette ash. By Agatha Christie Procedure Rely Expert Seek Ash

teeth. It was her offering which Aivas was rejecting. 'Of course,' and she brightened, 'we could keep some around to study and learn from, couldn't we?' She saw the horror and disgust of some of her colleagues. 'No, I guess we couldn't. Ah, well, back to microscope. My 98th batch of trials today. By Anne Mccaffrey Teeth Aivas Rejecting Offering Brightened

My doctor is wonderful. Once, in 1955, when I couldn't afford an operation, he touched up the X-rays. By Joey Bishop Wonderful Xrays Doctor Operation Afford

One must always proceed with method. I made an error of judgment asking you that question. Toeach man his own knowledge. You could tell me the details of the patient's physical appearance- nothing there would escape you. If I wanted information about the papers on the desk, Mr. Raymond would have noticed anything there was to see. To find out about the fire, I must ask the man whose business is to observe such things. - Detective Hercule Poirot to Doctor Sheppard By Agatha Christie Method Proceed Man Question Detective

for decades doctors never suspected that this "useless" tissue might actually have a use that escaped their detection. The By Nassim Nicholas Taleb Useless Tissue Detection Decades Doctors

And my real enemy is not to hold the specimen sterile, but it's the lighting. The light is our real enemy. So we have to work with very very poor lighting. But we can increase the light with computers. By Lennart Nilsson Real Enemy Sterile Lighting Hold

The scientific obligation is first to establish the cause of the disease beyond reasonable doubt. By Gary Taubes Doubt Scientific Obligation Establish Disease

Bedside manners are no substitute for the right diagnosis. By Alfred P. Sloan Bedside Diagnosis Manners Substitute

Doctors most commonly get mixed up between absence of evidence and evidence of abense By Nassim Nicholas Taleb Doctors Abense Evidence Commonly Mixed

For those of us who have been diagnosed with cancer, time is a precious commodity. The time and distance from the scientist's lab bench to the patient's bedside must be shortened. By Larry Lucchino Cancer Commodity Time Diagnosed Precious

Look well to the spine for the cause of disease. By Hippocrates Disease Spine

To be a good diagnostician, a physician needs to acquire a large set of labels for diseases, each of which binds an idea of the illness and its symptoms, possible antecedents and causes, possible developments and consequences, and possible interventions to cure or mitigate the illness. By Daniel Kahneman Illness Diagnostician Diseases Symptoms Consequences

My sense is that the wonderful technology that we have to visualize the inside of the body often leaves physicians feeling that the exam is a waste of time and so they may shortchange the ritual. By Abraham Verghese Ritual Sense Wonderful Technology Visualize

Germans at the time believed, a little oddly, that dyes killed germs by turning the germs' vital organs the wrong color. By Sam Kean Germans Believed Oddly Color Time

They had decided that BO and halitosis were worked out, or nearly, and had been racking their brains for a long time to think of some new way of scaring the public. Then some bright spark had suggested, What about smelling feet? That field had never been exploited and had immense possibilities. By George Orwell Public Decided Halitosis Worked Racking

From the corners of her mouth, thick yellow goo bubbles. It matches the mess between Vesper's fingers, the slime on her chin, on her legs, the blobs that randomly pepper things, the blast radius massive, confounding By Peter Newman Mouth Thick Bubbles Corners Yellow

They had to evacuate the grade school on Tuesday. Kids were getting headaches and eye irritations, tasting metal in their mouths. A teacher rolled on the floor and spoke foreign languages. No one knew what was wrong. Investigators said it could be the ventilating system, the paint or varnish, the foam insulation, the electrical insulation, the cafeteria food, the rays emitted by microcomputers, the asbestos fireproofing, the adhesive on shipping containers, the fumes from the chlorinated pool, or perhaps something deeper, finer-grained, more closely woven into the basic state of things. By Don Delillo Tuesday Evacuate Grade School Insulation