@aribindi LLM based AI are much better at reading charts than human, let alone radiologists. I think your are confusing a radiologist that read the charts with a radiologist that cares. AI will replace those who only provide superficial levels of care.
@thecybersurg Our field is unfortunately long been plagued by virtue signaling. It’s rooted in the training. We are conditioned to “impress and please”. Not enough take the red pill and stand for their own beliefs.
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy At the end, who knows, maybe you really have a majorly F’ed up shoulder. But I’m not a snowflake so no trauma has been afflicted :)
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy Many other pathologies can also do that, sickle cell, crystalline or non-crystalline arthropathies, or inflammation or infectious arthropathy. Why not list them all? What’s the point of these information?
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy For example, “superior lateral humeral
Head cortical irregularity” can be seen with prior anterior posterior shoulder dislocation. How could you possibly get that from a bench press?
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy To accept an AI interpretation without understanding the knowledge behind it is problematic. An analogy would be vibe coders making apps but not understanding the cybersecurity in the backend.
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy Bottom line is, I’m not here to dismiss AI in medical imaging but merely to ingage in the conversation that not enough people talk about. Imaging science and clinical imaging, just like any other advanced fields, are very nuanced.
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy - damn you chose to live with that kind of tear for 20 years?
- capsule wall thickening can almost be seen in over half of any joint MRIs. What’s the point of bringing up a nonspecific findings to suggest a specific disease?
@stevenmarkryan@Ericjduffy - did you get an arthrogram and imaged in ABER views? If you only had~150images I don’t think that’s the case. Because a SLAP lesion from 20 years ago would most likely be invisible on a routine shoulder MRI today. The validity of the findings are simply presumed to be correct.
@Ericjduffy@stevenmarkryan lol what’s the statistical likelihood that SMR, a young man in maybe 30s, has adhesive capsulitis (a old women disease) and also SLAP tear (an elite athlete disease) at the same time? That would truly be one for the medical journals.