Search results
- The United States was a mostly rural country without many automobiles or paved roads. Many patients with a broken leg would find it difficult to make their way to an X-ray machine. Once admitted to a hospital, however, if that hospital had an X-ray machine, they did not need to travel to obtain the test.
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5216491/EARLY CLINICAL USE OF THE X-RAY - PMC - PubMed Central (PMC)
People also ask
Why were X-rays difficult to use before 1913?
When did X rays come out?
Why is the history of X-ray important?
How did X-ray technology change in the 1920s?
Who discovered X rays?
How did X-rays help physics?
Sep 6, 2011 · This article will characterize patients' anxieties about x-rays in the first quarter century of their use and demonstrate that long before Americans perceived radiation as a subtle and insidious threat to health, they were earnestly convinced of the overt power of x-rays to both heal and harm.
- Matthew Lavine
- 2012
Rather than ask why the X-ray was so little used in 1900 and 1909, it might be more productive to ask what happened that led to the increased X-ray use by the close of the first quarter of the 20 th century. One major change was in who was designated to operate the machine.
May 31, 2010 · It was difficult to use x-rays in medicine before 1913 due to the high amount of voltage necessary for adequate images, which would often result in the source x-ray tube breaking down. In 1913, Coolidge designed a high vacuum x-ray tube that could serve as an intense and reliable source.
- Amy B. Reed
- 2011
May 16, 2017 · After news of Wilhelm Röntgen’s discovery of X-rays was cabled across the Atlantic late in 1895, evidence suggests X-ray experimentation was taken up eagerly all over the U.S. almost immediately.
Sep 17, 2015 · Roentgen quickly found that X-rays would pass through human tissue too, rendering the bones and tissue beneath visible. News of his discovery spread worldwide, and within a year, doctors in Europe and the United States were using X-rays to locate gun shots, bone fractures, kidney stones and swallowed objects.
It was difficult to use x-rays in medicine before 1913 due to the high amount of voltage necessary for adequate images, which would often result in the source x-ray tube breaking down. In 1913, Coolidge designed a high vac-uum x-ray tube that could serve as an intense and reliable source. Additional high-voltage sources were ultimately
May 26, 2024 · In the early days of X-ray use, many doctors and technicians were exposed to high levels of radiation without proper protection, leading to a range of health problems, including skin burns, hair loss, and even cancer.