The aim of IMAGING is to create an international platform for education and scientific information exchange for students, fellows, clinicians and researchers interested in medical imaging. The journal publishes manuscripts encompassing a wide field of medical imaging, covering topics from cardiothoracic imaging, through abdominal, musculoskeletal and neuroimaging, as well as nuclear medicine and molecular imaging. The journal strives to communicate the latest developments in invasive and non-invasive medical imaging and image analysis to stay current with the tide of new information in order to educate and empower trainees and specialists.
Papers are accepted on the basis of scientific significance and suitability for publication and with the understanding that they have not been published, submitted or accepted for publication elsewhere (exception: an abstract in a congress program). The language of the journal is English. IMAGING is a continuing publication of the former IMAS (Interventional Medicine & Applied Science) with a modified name and scope, with a new editorial board, but unchanged publishing house (Akadémiai Kiadó).
Former title: Interventional Medicine and Applied Science ISSN 2061-5094 (Online). You can find the articles published between 2009–2019 at the following page: Interventional Medicine and Applied Science.
Indexing and Abstracting Services: WoS Emerging Science Citation Index, Scopus, DOAJ
Impact and ranking (2023)
Impact factor 0.7 (Q3) | Scopus CiteScore 0.7 (Q4) | Scimago SJR 0.181 (Q4) |
Volume 15, Issue 2, December 2023
Coronary CT angiography (CTA) of a 63 years old male patient with atypical chest pain. The patient underwent percutaneous coronary intervention with stent implantations in the left anterior descending artery due to acute coronary syndrome three years prior the coronary CTA. The CT was performed with a photon-counting CT (NAEOTOM Alpha, Siemens Healthineers, Forchheim, Germany) with ultra-high resolution scan mode (0.2 slice thickness). The image shows a volume rendered reconstruction. The stents are patent, no instent restenosis was detected. Image courtesy of: Medical Imaging Centre, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary
Volume 15, Issue 2, December 2023
Modified from Figure 3, Cirimele, V., D'Amone, G., Mallio, C., Zobel, B. B., & Faiella, E. (2023). Dual-energy CT in the emergency department: A pictorial essay from a single center experience. Imaging, 15(2), 94-100. https://doi.org/10.1556/1647.2023.00152.
Volume 15, Issue 1, June 2023
Dr. Lili Száraz and Dr. Bettina Budai, Medical Imaging Centre, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary
Volume 14, Issue 2, December 2022
Cochlear implant (left images) and normal bony labyrinth and auditory ossicles (right images) depicted by a dual-source photon-counting CT. Case images courtesy of Dr. Hunor Sükösd, Medical Imaging Centre, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary
Volume 14, Issue 1, June 2022