You don’t have to be an X-ray tech or work with radiation to greatly profit from owning and using this CD. It holds complete copies of 6 different publications that ANY medical worker or student can and should use.
An added benefit is that the cost to own these authoritative manuals is a very small
fraction of the cost of such texts in ordinary book form.
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Here is what you get on this remarkable CD:
* The U. S. Army Radiology Specialist Manual, Part I, April 2007
(202 pages – positioning geometry, exposure techniques, extremities, vertebrae, thorax, etc., with full illustrations and radiographic images)
* The U. S. Army Radiology Specialist Manual, Part II, October 2006
(190 pages – skull, facial bones, esophagus, digestive system, gall bladder, urogenital system, contrast media, skeletal surveys & scanography, arthrography, mammography, circulatory system, nervous system, portable radiography, etc. with full illustrations and radiographic images)
* Nuclear Medical Imaging by William W. Moses, Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory
(55-page slide show – describes nuclear medicine, tracer isotopes, positron emitters, computed tomagraphy, SPECT, PET, collimators, MRI and nuclear medical images, etc.)
* 10 CFR Part 20 Radiation Safety Regulations
(HTML version of the complete text of 10 Code of Federal Regulations Part 20)
* Joseph Maclise’s Surgical Anatomy (1859) produced by Don Kostuch
(318 pages, fully illustrated in color – Classical surgical anatomy book duplicated and released in January, 2008, through “Project Gutenberg.”)
* Human Machine by George B. Bridgman, January, 1939
(An “oldie” but a “goodie.” 153 illustrated pages of the anatomical structure and mechanisms of the human body, its muscles and bones and how they work together)
We have searched out these books and manuals for you and have placed them onto a single CD. You can make good and quick use of the CD in your home and office computers. That’s one easy and avantageous way to look up imaging techniques, radiation facts and safety rules, plus unusually detailed information and illustration of human anatomy. In addition, you can print out whole books and manuals at your computer’s printer for library shelf availability in notebook form.
You may not need or want this imaging CD yourself, but you will probably know of an
X-ray tech or a radiology department that could make daily use of its authoritative contents. Books similar to some on this CD sell for $100 or more each – so, if you believe that someone or some department you know of can use one of these CDs, be a friend and pass the word along.
Each CD comes with a money back guarantee. No questions asked !
$10 each CD, includes shipping and handling.
Send your name, postal address and check to:
G. Kilthau
Box 1741
Bellaire, TX 77402-1741
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